Trans
General trans community.
Rules:
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Follow all blahaj.zone rules
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All posts must be trans-related. Other queer-related posts go to c/lgbtq.
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Don't post negative, depressing news articles about trans issues unless there is a call to action or a way to help.
Resources:
Best resource: https://github.com/cvyl/awesome-transgender Site with links to resources for just about anything.
Trevor Project: crisis mental health services for LGBTQ people, lots of helpful information and resources: https://www.thetrevorproject.org/
The Gender Dysphoria Bible: useful info on various aspects of gender dysphoria: https://genderdysphoria.fyi/en
StainedGlassWoman: Various useful essays on trans topics: https://stainedglasswoman.substack.com/
Trans resources: https://trans-resources.info/
[USA] Resources for trans people in the South: https://southernequality.org/resources/transinthesouth/#provider-map
[USA] Report discrimination: https://action.aclu.org/legal-intake/report-lgbtqhiv-discrimination
[USA] Keep track on trans legislation and news: https://www.erininthemorning.com/
[GERMANY] Bundesverband Trans: Find medical trans resources: https://www.bundesverband-trans.de/publikationen/leitfaden-fuer-behandlungssuchende/
[GERMANY] Trans DB: Insurance information (may be outdated): https://transdb.de/
[GERMANY] Deutsche Gesellschaft für Transidentität und Intersexualität: They have contact information for their advice centers and some general information for trans and intersex people. They also do activism: dgti.org
*this is a work in progress, and these resources are courtesy of users like you! if you have a resource that helped you out in your trans journey, comment below in the pinned post and I'll add here to pass it on
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EDIT: I completely misread the OP.
Basically, I feminize at home for myself when my mental health is suffering because I am distressed by what I see in the mirror. Usually I'll just try to avoid mirrors, but on particularly bad days (often after a laser treatment on my face), I'll occasionally do makeup to feel good at home.
Mostly, it's no different than when I do makeup when I go out - it makes me more pretty and I feel better about the way I look. It creates a sense of relief.
here's my whole life's history with makeup:
It's complicated ... when I was a teenager and didn't know I was a woman / trans, etc. - every few years I would try makeup again, and every time I would be so upset and disappointed in what I saw in the mirror, it would make me swear off feminizing at all for even longer.This made me think I wasn't trans because I didn't like how makeup looked on me. Now I know I was feeling acute dysphoria when I looked in the mirror, and that the makeup created a clash with and emphasized my masculine traits, which was causing distress.
But at the time, I just thought makeup made me look ugly and I hated how I looked, and since makeup is feminizing and I assumed a trans woman would feel affirmed and happy with makeup, that I must not be trans or a woman, so it must be something else (a fetish, or just nothing).
Decades later, after I socially transitioned and realized that I really was a woman, early on I still struggled with makeup. What helped was to go to a Sephora and get a lesson - basically you pay to sit down and have a makeup specialist color match with your skin and pick out products for you to try, and then they teach you how to apply the makeup.
It was night and day, the results were great and very feminizing, and I felt so happy. What I didn't know back when I was younger is that makeup is a skill, and unskillful application of makeup can make you look worse or even less feminine.
So my whole attitude and perspective on makeup changed dramatically - instead of seeing it as something that would make me ugly and emphasize my masculine features, I saw it as a tool to combat my masculine features and to feminize my looks. This also made a tool against my dysphoria.
One day, my face was all puffy and red the day after a face laser session, and what I saw in the mirror made me so distressed that I started to spiral into an acutely suicidal moment - and my amazing partner sat me down in the bathroom and applied foundation to cover up my red and puffy skin, and hey - it actually worked. I felt better, I calmed down, and that was a day I realized how powerful makeup can be, and how crucial it is as a tool. I don't think I would have gone through with ending my life that day, but it certainly helped me recover from acute distress.
So from then on, I developed and maintained a respect for makeup as a pragmatic and life-affirming tool.
I spent hours watching youtube makeup tutorials, especially for how to use makeup to feminize (I often like to share the Samantha Lux feminizing makeup tutorial video), and started to do makeup regularly to help build my skills. Especially after the Sephora lesson, I tried to repeat what I had been taught. I also had women in my life who sat me down and showed me the products they used and how they applied their makeup, which was wonderfully affirming, but also extremely helpful and practical. They even helped me come to cope with applying makeup ethically - I always had "feminist" misgivings about using makeup (I felt it was like a betrayal to women to capitulate to the male gaze, etc.) - but instead I learned to view makeup increasingly as a social tool, as a way to fit in, to help my self-esteem, and I recontextualized makeup as something mostly for me than anything like trying to look appealing to men.
So, early in transition I basically put on a full face of makeup any time I left the house:
Usually, I put on a special playlist of music when I'm putting on my makeup. It's one of my favorite things to do, for sure. I often find that I enjoy my girly music and putting on makeup even more than I enjoy the event I got all dressed up for.
Here are some songs on my playlist to give you a general vibe and sense:
Most days now, I pass and don't need to wear a full face of makeup. I only go all out like that for date nights and special events.
Most days now when I go out my minimalist routine is:
Usually I'm doing this in a rush, so I rarely listen to music during these kinds of makeup sessions, and they're more mundane.
In terms of what I see in the mirror: without fail, I underestimate the way makeup improves my self-esteem and increases the odds I will be happily surprised at what I see in the mirror. It's not a silver bullet, but it does tangibly help.
This actually became a tool I would use even on days I wasn't leaving the house - taking care of my hair and doing makeup is something I did early in transition just to feel better, even if for no other reason.
Applying makeup does have a downside in that I spend a lot more time looking at myself in the mirror, and that can easily get out of control and turn into self-scrutiny and a down-ward spiral. Today I had a date night, and I did my full glam makeup with music playlist and everything (today my playlist was more Rihanna oriented 😅), but I kept thinking I was so ugly and that the makeup was so pointless because it's like putting makeup on a pig, etc. - I just felt too ugly to bother with.
But, then after I was done, and my partner oo'd and awe'd over me, I started to feel better, and there would be times I glanced at myself in the mirror and could see I was pretty. As usual I find I like what I see in the mirror when: 1. under low light conditions, 2. when I'm further away and I can't see every little detail, 3. when the light is warm and forgiving (and not harsh, blue, fluorescent, etc.).
So, it's a mixed bag.
Some days it's just better not to look in the mirror, and to just dissociate from my body entirely - like rest days. Other days, particularly when I have to leave my house, I find it's worth bothering with makeup.
Thanks for sharing all that though.
For me, it feels like... why even bother. I'm not pretty so trying to make myself pretty feels kinda pathetic. Ideally I'd accept that about myself but it's hard when I feel that's a big part of my solitude. It actively interferes with social needs. Not helped by somewhat introverted personality and autistic tendencies.
Yep, I'm exactly the same way: I feel I'm too ugly to bother with makeup, I'm introverted, I'm not diagnosed but probably autistic.
Those are sorta mental hurdles to overcome, though - developing that skill so that the makeup you manage to put on is beautifying and feminizing is still worth it. It doesn't really matter how ugly you are, using makeup the right way will help. (If anything the logic flows the other way, the uglier you are, the more makeup is necessary and helpful; I certainly used makeup a lot more earlier in my transition, and less later in my transition.)
In early transition, makeup was an essential lifeline and a way to survive, and good makeup was a difference between passing or not. Now that I'm viewed as female whether I wear makeup or not, I just don't have to do as much.
To get out of your rut, if you feel motivated to, I would lean on your community more - go to trans support groups and LGBT+ events, go to pride parades, etc. and make friends. Find a femme and see if she will teach you how to do makeup. Let femmes put makeup on you. Then as you're learning from those experiences, start watching makeup tutorials and trying out the suggestions you find - particularly geared towards trans women and feminizing the face.
Once your skills are good enough, the makeup will be self-justifying, you won't have all these questions about why to bother - because you'll know why, because the makeup makes you look pretty, more like a woman, etc.
Problem is that make up washes off. I have learned how to alter how my face appears etc. but in the end of the day, I know what I'll see in the mirror - which would also be what another person would see and have to accept. I'm terrified of the idea of making myself look nice with various tricks and then be a disappointment.
I don't know what to tell you - ultimately makeup can't solve deeper dysphoric issues, but that's why you orient your life to make what changes you can, e.g. with HRT and surgeries.
Makeup can (however temporarily) make some of those issues easier to deal with, and those pragmatic and personal benefits are not nothing simply because they're temporary.
Your comment comes across as defeatist and like self-sabotage, as a kind of rationalizing why you shouldn't make an effort to feel better or improve your situation.
For context, makeup skills also accumulate to the point that they can significantly help your confidence and happiness in most social situations. That you might be disappointed by what you see in the mirror after you've taken the makeup off before you go to bed is something every woman faces, whether trans or not - and while it's generally worse for trans women, we are still stuck with the choice to try to make the improvements we can make or not.
I think it's obvious that it's better to choose to try to make the improvements you can make than to choose to "lie down and rot", which helps nothing and is entirely unnecessary. Life can be so much better, I encourage you to suspend judgement and seek a better life whether the outcome is guaranteed or not. It's worth trying.
For me, transition is about affirming life and seeing the possibility in life - if I wanted to lie down and rot I wouldn't bother with transition at all, and I would continue living my life as I did pre-transition (basically looking for any excuse to die). While I still strongly feel people should have the right to make that choice, I recognize that I only felt that way because I was repressing and refusing to take care of myself. Now I recognize that transition is a part of being a good and responsible person, as it helps me stay motivated to take care of myself so I don't end up in the ER and burdening the people I care about.
So, maybe you haven't hit rock bottom enough yet to convince you that "lie down and rot" thinking is harmful to not just you but everyone else, but I hope you are able to find a way to feel motivated to take care of yourself and seek happiness - life can be so much better. :-)