There is someone for everyone, even if you are gender variant.
I have been communicating with a lot of male to female crossdreamers during the last nine years or so, and one of the major challenges facing many of them is extreme loneliness.
Many of them tell me they have few if any friends. The discussion that follows often leads us in direction of the topic of romance and sex.
I have been communicating with a lot of male to female crossdreamers during the last nine years or so, and one of the major challenges facing many of them is extreme loneliness.
Drawing by Slav |
There several reasons for why this becomes problematic:
Firstly, the are often confused about their own gender. As one young British crossdreamer recently told me: "I want to be a girl!" And if that isn't possible, this person wants at least to dress up like one.
It is hard to go out and seek out a woman for love and companionship, if she expects you to play the role of the straight non-transgender man, and you dream about being the female partner.
The fact is that many of those who are safely anchored in their assigned gender, also fear condemnation and ridicule if they reveal their gender variance to a partner.
So crossdreamers are facing two problems:
1. To find someone to love
2. If they do find someone to love, they might lose them if they tell them about their transgender nature (and I am using the word transgender in its broad umbrella sense here, including all shades of gender variant).
This is especially a problem for male to female (MTF) crossdreamers who love women.
So crossdreamers are facing two problems:
1. To find someone to love
2. If they do find someone to love, they might lose them if they tell them about their transgender nature (and I am using the word transgender in its broad umbrella sense here, including all shades of gender variant).
This is especially a problem for male to female (MTF) crossdreamers who love women.