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#I started this blog in 2019 when I was 13 and cis
catroublex2 · 11 months
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in hindsight, I liked Double Trouble a little too much to be cisgender
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pride-and-flags-47 · 3 years
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Nonbinary November, Again!
Last year i answered the 22 questions @letters-to-lgbt-kids made for november, and I think it’s a good idea do re-answer them!
1.Which labels do you use?
At the moment, my gender labels are trans guy, nonbinary and demiboy, my gender isn’t exactly three gender but also isn’t exactly only one. For other non gender related stuff, aroace and gay (gay as in mlm, nblm, nblnb and mlnb).
And Ive named my gender but don't actively use the term, but it's still my gender, boyenbyflux.
2.What are your pronouns?
Only he/him!
3.How old were you when you came out to yourself as nonbinary?
Had to look in the older answers, but ye, in 2017 I used the label demigirl but never really thought of myself as not cis at the time, and in december of 2018 was when I realized I was trans, and started using demiboy, but as far as using the label nonbinary itself, around the middle of 2019.
4.What’s one thing you’d like to tell your younger self?
I always have a hard time with things like this. I think I’ll focus this on Alec on early 2020 for this: you’re not faking or cis for having weird gender dysphoria/euphora/apathy days, and a part of these weird days is because of the nonbinary part being louder than the male part of your gender at that moment.
5.Is there a myth about nonbinary people that annoys you the most?
Not really a myth, but the wrong belief that nonbinary genders are only one thing and that they can’t sometimes lean towards one or both binary genders.
6.Is there a nonbinary celebrity you look up to?
Not really? I’m not really big on following celebrities.
7.If you’re out, how did you come out?
Haven’t come out to most people I know irl. But I did come out to a colleague, it went well! I came out through WhatsApp and just said that I'm trans and aroace and gay.
8.Is there a gender-related pun you like?
non-bee-nary
Also not really a pun but none gender with left boy XD
9.Do you have friends who identify as nonbinary, too?
Nbfbsbsnn yeah basically most of my transmasc friends are also on the nonbinary spectrum.
10.Do you have a favorite lgbt+ character?
My characters fndnfsnn
But also my friends’ ocs.
As for more known media I forgot everything right now.
11. Lgbt, lgbt+, lgbtqa+… which one do you usually use?
All of them but also LGBTQ and LGBTQ+ and many other alternatives. Depends on the day.
12. How do you explain the term “nonbinary” to people who have no idea what it means?
A gender that isn’t entirely a binary gender (aka man and woman), basically almost any gender that isn’t 100% man or woman.
13.Tell us a fun fact about yourself (gender-related or random!)
I’ve been drawing everyday this year so far!
14.How did you find your name?
OK now that I have more names, I’ll go through each one XD
I chose Alec because two months before I realized I was trans I created an oc and called him Alec and I thought it was the closest to the male version of my deadname (it’s honestly not that close) and then I started using it! And it's my main name still.
As for Arthur, I just like it! Same for Alexandre, besides the fact that I though of a hypothetical scenario where I’m called uncle Alexandre and it makes me soft :3 and I had already been thinking about using Arthur or Alexandre instead of Alec or as my legal name while Alec would be a nickname, back in 2019 but I forgot about this until like, august/september of this year. And its AlexandRE, not AlexandER, Alexandre is more common here in my country + I have an oc with the name Alexander and he’s a horrible person and I couldn’t ever use that name for me XD
And Alex, it’s because I ended up starting relating a lot with my oc with that name, and there’s the bonus that is very similar to Alec and it’s a nice name.
15.If you’re in a relationship, how did your partner react to your coming-out?
I don’t have a partner.
16.Do you prefer partner, datemate, significant other or something else?
I don’t want a romantic relationship but if I enter a QPR I’d like to be called boyfriend :3 I also like the term joyfriend :3 I’m ok with partner but isn’t my prefered one.
17.A piece of advice for questioning kids?
Take your time, there’s no pressure to find out as fast as possible. Also gender and orientation is weird so it’s normal to end up going through a lot of labels, to settle with the first one you think about, to change between labels and go back to the first one and even to never really always settle. Life is weird and labels are too, and you have my full on support on your questioning journey.
18.Which flag(s) do you use?
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I've been also looking for other gay man flags but haven't settled with another besides the rainbow one, but Ive been looking at the one libragender made and it's pretty nice.
And these last two i made them! It's the mlm + nblm flag and the flag about my gender!
19.Any tips for bad days?
Drink water, eat something, if you’re able, socialize and/or take a walk and get some sunlight. It wont help everything but somethimes that’s what is what is wrong and if it’s not the case, at least it’s less things making you feel worse.
And this blog is always open to listening and supporting, althought I may not always have advice, I can lend an ear for vents and stuff.
20.Do you have a favorite nonbinary blog on tumblr?
@finley-myself
Their comic is great and they’re honestly a really nice person!
21.Feminine, masculine, androgynous - or none of those things?
I call my presentation soft masc. It’s definetly masculine, with a tinge of androgeny but without anything feminine, Or I take something feminine and make it androgenous. And it’s soft because it’s not overly masculine, it’s masc light.
22. What are your three favorite things about yourself?
1- My sense of humor
2- My knowledge of random things
3- My attention to small things
And that’s it! be sure to check Oliver’s blog out too! It’s a really nice and positive place and his letters always cheer me up!
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RULES: answer 21 questions (+5) and then tag 20 people you wanna know better 
tagged by: @silverkasienka thank youuuuu
1. name: megan
2. nickname(s): meg or megs
3. zodiac: leo
4. height: 5′4/5′5 
5. languages: english, shitty irish & bare minimum french
6. nationality: irish
7. favourite season: winter
8. favourite flower: rose
9. favourite scent: my nana’s house (look, i know this sounds weird but it’s comforting to me allow it)
10. favourite animal: daniel ricciardo turtle
11. favourite ficitional character: rachel green (i’m her)
12. coffee, tea, or hot chocolate: i can’t live without tea 
13. average sleep: it really depends lmao i’m awful at sleeping when i’m meant to but i guess around 7 hours??
14. favourite color: baby pink
15. dog or cat person: dogs
16. number of blankets: a duvet & a fluffy blanket on top
17. dream trip: new york or australia
18. blog established: technically like jan/feb 2019 but i started posting in april 2019
19. follower count: at the moment, it’s 981 (981 TOO MANY)
20. random fact about me: i’m terrified of worms, snails & slugs
21. gender: cis female
22. sexuality: bi 
23. harry potter moral compass: i’m too sexy to know what this means
24. where are you from: ireland
25. why did you start this blog: i needed somewhere to call daniel ‘daddy’ and f1 twitter just wasn’t it. i had stalked the f1 tags/blogs long before making this blog and one day i was like ‘lmao fuck it make one’ and so ricciardhoes was born (still shocked that no one had that url tbh)
26. most recently played album: manic by halsey
tagging: formulacum & anyone that wants to do it :-) x x
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A Yearly Gender Dysphoria Review for 2019
A Yearly Gender Dysphoria Review
December, 2019
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(Taken February 2019 - 10 Months On HRT)
Abstract: The purpose of this yearly review is to track my progress as being transgender. I theorize that being transgender isn’t only a biological change; but a mental change that is brought on by chemical and cultural adaptations. It is very difficult to measure one’s transformation on a daily scale and after conducting two years of this review, I hope it will yield that I am not only changing physically, but also mentally.
Many of the questions are very personal…but for the purposes of scientific research, I’ve written questions to form a baseline over the years and questions that dive into my physical changes, Physical desires; sexual changes and sexual desires.
In five years, it is the hopes of this review to compare and contrast my evolution from male to female and to see how closely I stayed at my goals.
 ***
BASELINE QUESTIONS
Given Name: David
Desired Name: Mira
Legal Name: Mira Carleen
Desired Gender: Female
Legal Gender: Female
LGBT Status: Transgender
Relationship Status: Dating
1) How did you choose your name?
A: Mira was a name that I have gone by secretly since I was seven years old. Oddly, the name came to me during a drowning event at Copalis Beach. I hallucinated that I was saved by a mermaid who told me that her actions would have profound implications on my life. She wasn’t incline to return me to the surface, wanting me to remain with her and she gave me a new name that sounded like ‘Mer-a’. I begged to return to the surface to be with my family and she reluctantly took me to the surface while telling me that from this point forward, I’d no longer be male, but a female mermaid and that the change will happen if I like it or not.
To say the least, the origin of my name sounds something mythical. By for my family’s beliefs; it is quite likely that I was saved by a mermaid as our family has been entangled with mermaids since the 1500s.
Oddly, the name Mira has more implications then I could have ever imagined! Many of the meanings behind the name Mira speak to my personality (Wonder, Wonderful, Goodness, Peace, Kindness, Helpful, Beautiful, Prosperous, Ocean, Sea, Limit, Boundary, Light, Princess, Soft Like Velvet Rose, He/she Watches, Exalted, Star of the Ocean).
As for Carleen, that name was chosen in January of 2019 in remembrance of Amanda who set me on track to preserve my life from an unknown respiratory disease that almost killed me in 2015. Without the knowledge of cystic fibrosis, I would have continued on the wrong therapy and most likely died from lung failure.
2) What other names were you thinking about using and why?
A: My top five were Mira, Delenn, Kathryn, Harmony and River. Mira eventually won over all the names as it meant the most to me. Delenn was a fascination of grace and power from the Croatian actress, Mira Furlan. Kathryn’s origin is unknown, just a name I used a lot in the 2000s in my stories. Harmony and River both have ties to water.
The expanded full list looked like this:
Mira (Chosen name, given by a mermaid)
Amira (Version of Mira)
Arimira (Version of Mira)
Nanette (A name I used in my stories)
Ananette (A name I used in my stories)
Kathryn (A name I used in my stories)
Kathren (A name I used in my stories)
Kristin (A name I used in my stories)
Sirena (Uncertain…Ocean related name)
Harmony (Harmony Falls, Mount St. Helens)
Delenn (Babylon 5 Character)
Rain (Androgynous Name)
River (Androgynous Name)
Tia (Uncertain)
Bri (A name I used in my stories)
November (My birth month)
Aura (Lovely name)
 3) How long have you been on HRT?
A: 15 Months (Enrolled In The Program) and 13 Months of compliance with HRT.
4) How long have you been Mira?
A: 28 Years
5) How long have you been ‘Mira’ legally?
A: 9 Months
6) How long have you identified as female?
A: About 28 Years
7) How long have you’ve been legally female?
A: 9 Months
8) Do you regret your decision to become Transgender (Woman)?
A: No. I only wished that I have became transgender much sooner. My life as a female, as Mira has been a blessing. Much of the social pressure that I felt as being David is gone; and since my transition, my relationship has improved.
There is still concern about what I am doing, but I’ve had 28 years to figure this all out. The only difference now is that my whole name is different and I am finally looking like the woman I’ve always imagined myself becoming.
9) How long have you known you were Transgender (LGBT)?
A: This is a difficult question as I’ve struggled with the label ‘transgender’. I was raised to believe that those that were lesbians, gay, bisexual and transgender were mentally disturbed. So, accepting that I fall under the LGBT umbrella has taken some time to get use to.
If I had to be honest, I began to truly realize I might be transgender when I signed that Consent form to begin HRT. So, roughly a year and three months.
***
LGBT QUESTIONS
1) On the LGBT spectrum, where do you fall; gender?
A: Transgender Woman
2) On the LGBT spectrum, where do you fall; sexual?
A: Lesbian
3) When did you realize that the term Transgender referred to you?
A: At the beginning of 2019 when I began considering legally changing my name from David to Mira. The catalysis that solidified the term was when I decided to make a full gender transition from male to female and began considering surgical intervention. Because of these changes, I feel that I no longer can label myself neither ‘gender-fluid’ or ‘non-conforming’.
4) When did you realize that the term Lesbian referred to you?
A: Around February 2019 when I rekindled my relationship with my girlfriend. We considered the aspect of our relationship. And because I yearn to become female legally, physically and sexually…it would transform our relationship status from male & female to female & female. By April 2019, I legally changed my gender from male to female, making our relationship as lesbians.
5) Are you comfortable with the term ‘LGBT’ or calling yourself Transgender and/or a Lesbian?
A: No. I’ve never liked labels…they are too restrictive to a person’s true identity.
Like the labels of male and female; they are terribly flawed! One truly can not be pure female or pure male. For females, their bodies convert excessive estrogen into testosterone; aiding in secondary male characteristics like facial hair. And males, they are first conceived as females before a mutated gene switches them into a male.
I find that society, which is now much more accepting of the LGBT; still has an unwillingness to fully accept them as being a lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender on the basis of not understanding what makes us ‘different’ from a normal cis-woman or cis-man. This ignorance can lead to cis-people acting out in flight-or-fight responses when confronted with something that isn’t like them.
Over the months however, I have slowly come to terms to accept that is am no longer a cis-male by birth, but transgender, as I will have both cis-male and cis-female physical characteristics and biological functions (minus a uterus or ovaries).
6) Are you currently active in the Trans Community or LGBT Community?
A: No. Not physically. I do write about my experiences at a Transgender Woman battling gender dysphoria. I update two blogs to catalogue my journey (Tumblr & DeviantArt. With case-sensitive images not allowed on Tumblr’s platform).
As of lately, I work with my transgender physician to catalogue medical changes and correlate my research with what she knows to bring the most accurate information possible.
7) Have you reached out to a LGBT center for help?
A: Yes. I reached out to the Ingersoll Gender Center in Seattle twice for help finding a doctor and information on psychologists capable of diagnosing gender dysphoria…but I’ve never heard back from them on both messages.
Since then, I refuse to use any LGBT accredited resources as they are unreliable.
8) Who was the first person you told about being Transgender?
A: Unofficially, it would have been my girlfriend, Ruth. Before I started HRT, I mentioned to her that I thought I might be gender-fluid or gender nonconforming. She replied that she had suspicions that I might be transgender as I always associated as female. She also thought I might be asexual in sexuality due to my displeasure in intimacy.
9) What are something positive about being Transgender?
A: Personally, for me, it is like finally healing from a long-term wound that no one can see. I can finally blossom, open up and be the person I truly am without the risk of being of being called emasculate terms.
Being transgender is something rare. Most humans will only experience one half of their potential, whereas trans individuals like myself, we experience both halves of our soul; knowing what it is like to be both male and female at the same time.
10) What are some fears about being Transgender?
A: My biggest fears seem to surround what other cis-people think of me. There is always the fear that someone unstable will perceive me as a threat to their ideology and act out irrationally.
Using the restroom is still terrifying to me! I’d rather risk an ‘accident’ then place myself in a situation where I might get harmed. Even calling myself female can be scary depending where in the country I am, or the age of the crowd I’m in.
I hadn’t considered how ‘vulnerable’ I would feel being female until the day I was tormented by an intoxicated gentleman, alone in an elevator. This experience opened a whole array of thoughts of dangers that I am now susceptible to: ie: mainly sexual harassment and after GRS, rape. I however feel confident I can defend myself in these situations.
11) How do you manage your dysphoria?
A: At this time, with Hormone Replacement Therapy. With a great reduction in testosterone, many of the mental symptoms of gender dysphoria have faded away. I still have the physical dysphoria that I deal with from time to time.
However, I hope to treat the four major causes of my dysphoria with treatments and surgery. The biggest one was my dysphoria of body hair. I have begun laser hair removal of the face and am considering laser hair removal of the chest (mainly breasts) once my face is fully treated (also, these treatments are terribly expensive! Almost 1,500$ for just the face and neck). The second surgery is FFS which is being determined by the insurance company (Jan 2020) and breast augmentation sometime late 2020 to 2021. The last surgery will be GRS to complete my transition.
12) What are you doing to stay healthy for transitioning mentally and physically?
A: Looking at the positives is a must!
My MtF~HRT Journey hasn’t been easy and very costly!
Dealing with the toxicity of female hormones at the beginning was tough, but now that I am chemically female, it is much better.
One of the things that can be a put down is not transitioning fast enough. I always tell myself: Puberty lasts for years, and my coming of age took four years to finalize when I was 17 years old. So, HRT isn’t going to happen overnight.
Sometimes I look in the mirror and become annoyed as I still see a male face looking back at me, but I remind myself that this is a process. It can take the face 5-10 years to finalize on hormones! 12 months to finalize after FFS.
Then there is the aspect of surgery. I am no fan of pain; but living with CF has given me somewhat of a tolerance to it. I look at surgery as milestones that I must achieve in order to live my life to its fullest and to write down in this blog that hundreds of perspective LGBT individuals are reading and following.
Mostly, I get through this all as playing the scientist role in this journey. My training and background in geology gives me a constantly curious mind and when I looked for answers across the internet and found jumbled information with very little scientific approach, I knew that my transition must be for a greater good.
Mentally, I am living my life as Mira. I never look back on my life as David…I’ve pretty much separated everything that made me David for Mira, going in a whole different direction with my life…literally born anew.
13) How have you’ve embraced your Transgender identity?
A: I haven’t really.
I’ll tell people I’m transgender when I feel that I have been called-out. But most of the time I am just embracing my womanhood.
I’ve been invited to a few LGBT support groups and have been invited to a Gay parade in Bremerton, but I’ve kindly declined each time.
If I am anywhere close to embracing my Transgender identity, it is probably in this blog. And if I am being truthful with myself, my identity as Mira makes me equally transgender.
18) How do you feel about the LGBT laws where you live?
A: As a resident of Washington State, we have some of the most aggressive LGBT laws (besides California) that protects the Transgender. Pride parades are very common here and even the city of Seattle has elected its second LGBT mayor.
Yet, we still have some serious grey areas!
I live in the rural area of Kitsap County which has an older population and a military population what is quite resistant of the LGBT. So being openly transgender in my hometown isn’t wise.
Under Washington Law, same-sex sexuality was legalized in 1976, anti-discrimination laws passed in 2012, same-sex marriages legalized in 2012, lesbians, gays and bisexuals allowed to serve in the military in 2011 (transgender people are forbidden). We have the right to change of gender without GRS, and LGBT options are available on birth certificates as of 2018. Our schools have an LGBT anti-bullying policy and we can donate blood if desired.
19) What are your views on the cis-gendered community?
A: As a previous cis-gendered individual; I have only come into knowing the LGBT community since I attended college. While at South Kitsap, the term LGBT was unknown to me. And even then, I only began to understand my place in the grand scheme of Cisgendered vs. Transgendered nature.
I’ve seen and experienced both sides of the cis-gendered community; from the accepting to the un-accepting to the ones that wish to do harm.
Being transgender, I know what it is like to deal with gender dysphoria and to watch a few cis-gendered individuals say that it is all a mental disease isn’t only hurtful…its pure ignorance.
I do my best to align myself with the friendly, accepting cis-women and cis-men who see me as Mira and not a Transgendered Woman.
 ***
BODY-TYPE (DYSPHORIA) QUESTIONS
Facial Features (Desired)
I envisioned my face being rounded ‘oval’ in shape…which is classical for an ideal ‘feminine’ feature. My upper cheek bones are pronounced to make my cheeks fuller in appearance, my jawline smooth without its sharp ‘masculine’ features. My lips are filled out, but not changed much from my male lips. My nose thinned in appearance and my face has no visible facial hair. My brow thinned back, opening up more of my eyes.
Hair Features (Desired)
I envision my hair being shoulder blade in length, blonde with silver highlights. The tips of my hair dyed aqua-blue. Light wavy texture and shiny and healthy.
I prefer my hair only layered (lightly), my bangs natural and swept over to my right side. My hair parts down the left side of my head as it always has. I hardly tie back my hair, only using clips on the long bangs to keep it out of my eyes. I picture my hair parted in two ways, half hanging over my shoulders, embordering my facial features as it rests between my clavicles and breasts. The other half resting down my back.
Neck Features (Desired)
Slender, the structure pretty much unaltered from the physical neck on my previous male form.
I envision no visible facial hair on the upper portions of the neck (to chin and jaw).
Shoulders Features (Desired)
Maintain their masculine shape, but thinned down.
Relearn to reposition my shoulder blades to feminine stature to support the spine and make room for my breasts.
Upper Arms (Desired)
Feminine in muscle mass and tone. This is a must if I plan to wear feminine clothes, thanks to the stitching in the fabric to support the breasts which makes the arms sometimes tight.
The skin should be devoid of any body hair.
Lower Arms (Desired)
Feminine in muscle mass and tone. 70% of the time my lower arms will be exposed and can give me away as transgender if not maintained. The skin should be always devoid of any body hair at all times.
Back (Desired)
No visible body hair
Chest & Breasts (Desired)
No visible body hair, smooth.
I have two C-Cup breasts, firm and dome-like in appearance. My mammary glands fully formed with appropriate amount of fat. Nipples are feminine in appearance with darkened areolas about quarter size.
Belly And Waist (Desired)
No body hair, smooth.
Belly is rounded (being realistic), but fat is redistributed to my hips, making only one belly roll when I sit down. Waist is narrow in appearance (between my chest and hips).
Genitalia (Desired)
I envision myself without my penis or testicles (as they are part of my gender dysphoria). They will have been repurposed into a functionable feminine ureteral and vagina. It is a must to rid of the male genitalia (physically) to pass officially as female. Until then, my favorite activity like swimming will always be a lingering fear…and relationship-wise, it is the only way I can become ‘sexually’ active as I feel that my male genitalia are an abomination; only serving in one function: low UTI risk which can be managed with proper hygiene as a female.
Buttock (Desired)
I envision myself with a feminine buttock in size and proportion. Rounded and firm, but not overly large. My buttock should gently blend in with my hips.
Upper Thighs (Desired)
Maintain my muscular mass. Body hair here is acceptable if it is light brown or blonde in color (with blonde being ideal).
Lower Legs (Desired)
I envision them feminine in form, but maintain a lean muscle mass as I wish to return back to hiking and swimming after my transition. Body hair here is not acceptable due to wearing dresses and skirts.
Feet (Desired)
Not really a top priority. My feet will retain their size 13 form; however, my nails shall remain painted in gel polish.
Hands (Desired)
Not really a top priority. My fingers have always been slender, long and feminine. I envision always having my nails painted with gel polish; my body hair shaved.
 ***
MENTAL EVALUATION QUESTIONS
Feminized Brain
1) Have you’ve grown fond of the color pink?
A: No. I still do not find hues of red attractive. Especially pink.
In my updated ‘feminine’ wardrobe; I’ve avoided all colors of red, orange and yellow and prefer colors in the hue of blue. I like both black, white and grey.
I’ve noticed that I have taken on a liking of purple…which I never wore before my HRT.
2) Have you’ve noticed any new scents coming off your body?
A: Yes. At first it wasn’t quite noticeable. In my first few months of HRT. I guess when you’ve been a cis-male for over 33 years of your life, you become ‘blind’ to your natural pheromone odor.
However, about a year into my HRT, I began detecting something ‘off’ about the way I smelled. Now, it isn’t anything like body odor created by sweat-devouring bacteria, it was something that lingered after a shower, or went with you throughout the day.
Oddly, when I began detecting this scent, I noticed that I wasn’t alone. This was about the same time when I began getting unwanted sexual gestures from men. Even my mother noticed the change about three months ago when we were at a casino.
Even now, I still struggle to explain it; to me, it is like a scent of freshness…but when I seem to enter a ‘pseudo-cycle’ from my hormones, those scents seem to increase to the point that it can be over bearing. Secondly, I have noticed that if I use secondary scents like fragrant body wash or perfume, it only increases the scent.
3) Have you subconsciously used ‘female pronouns’ in describing yourself?
A: It varies from time to time. I’d say, maybe 60% of the time I think of myself in female pronouns. I remember how odd it felt to say ‘she’ and ‘her’, like when someone calls to talk to Mira and at first, I hesitated when I said ‘…she? Speaking.’ now it is a confident ‘This is her speaking.’
When I think of myself as in individual, usually when my dysphoria seems to be triggered is when I revert back to confusion and/or ‘him’. However, even that is starting to fade away as I am seeing myself anew each week.
At first, I did not really care if people called me ‘he’ or ‘she’, and this seemed to delay my subconscious feminization for a time. However, as I have began mentally calling myself a ‘she’, I find myself annoyed with the improper pronouns, but will not verbally correct anyone…I just ignore them entirely as if they don’t even exist in my reality.
4) Have you started ‘mentally seeing’ yourself only as female?
A: It varies from time to time. Most of the time I picture myself female. I have pictured myself as a female since I was only seven years old. Only when I feel that I am failing to pass as female do I start doubting myself.
Oddly, when my mental voice speaks, it is female and quite possibly is my strongest advocate for myself as it continues to remind me that I have always been Mira; just that something went wrong during my rebirth.
I still see myself as a woman, which gives me a mental picture to compare with what my eyes see. And at this time, I’d say that I am about 40 percent of the way there.
5) Has your demeanor became ‘feminine?’
A: Somewhat. Most of my verbal and body language is becoming feminine in nature, some on purpose and some subconsciously. Even my changing anatomy has my body position differently.
For example, having C-Cup breasts are very heavy when your back isn’t use to them. To release the tension and stress off of my upper back, I have had to relearn to sit and hold myself up in an ergonomic fashion.
Widening hips (due to extra fat) and widening glutes have offset my stride and I find myself swaying more often at the hips, which gives me a feminine gate.
My speech patterns have not changed, nor has my vocal tones in how I pronunciate my words.
 Feminized Aspect
1) What cup size did you ‘want’ your breasts to be?
A: I desire to have bigger breasts then average…I’ve always expected myself of having a larger bust size, and with my recent growth, I’ve been somewhat pleased as my growth will make a great platform for implants down the road.
Recently, I have experienced one of the more unpleasant side-effects of having large breasts: back pain and digging bra straps. Even now, I still don’t consider my breasts as feminine breasts because when I lay down, they seem to disappear. This is totally natural with women whose breasts are between an AA-A-Cup.
With implants (which I will be fighting to get this year); they would retain a natural look while I lay down, staying centered on the chest, not flattening out like my breasts are doing now. (Although, when I wear a bra, the breasts are held in place it seems)
2) Has your sexuality changed?
A: No, I am still sexually attracted to women. The thought of dating a guy is appalling to me. However, I have found myself sometimes ‘looking’ at guys in a daydreaming state, but I still can’t see myself in a romantic relationship with men.
During euphoric moments (which have changed on their own accord), my mind does venture on the aspects of intimacy. This has never happened before when I was a cis-male and is very confusing. I find myself mostly wanted to be held, touched and embraced. This desire has even led me to overcoming my fear of touching my girlfriend and has allowed us to share in our first hug and kiss in over 12 years of being together.
3) Do you feel sexually as a woman now?
A: This is a very personal question...but yes.
Some of the sensations I now feel are beyond anything I’ve felt as male. Without going to deep into details, when I was a male, the erogenous center was around the genitalia. But since taking hormones; within the first few months my skin literally changed. Becoming soft and silky and very sensitive.
Simply being touched is enough to stimulate my senses, and the breasts have become more sensitive then my neither region. During stimulation, the euphoria seems to last for a long time...sometimes minutes to a half-hour.
Oddly, my sexuality has changed when it comes to intimacy and orgasms. As a male, we have to stimulate ourselves physically and achieve a few seconds/minutes of sexual release. But as a female, I’ve found myself not needing any physical stimulation to onset an orgasm. And it should be noted that it isn’t an isolated orgasm...it is full body.
I am starting to understand what my girlfriend was hinting at as she comes into these moments of sexual tension. It is very powerful. During my erogenous moments, all I want to do is be touched and held (which would stimulate myself). I’ve even had a few moments when these power sensations would cause me to think of sex (as a female). But those thoughts confuse me and make me feel unclean.
I think this is my brain’s way of conditioning me to womanhood, but confused about the anatomy (as my daydreams usually have we with female genitalia instead of male). Sadly, exploring this sexual transformation is something I don’t feel comfortable sharing in detail.
4) Has your attention to beauty changed from the time you were a cis-male?
A: Greatly. Prior to my HRT, I did not think that I’d be so focused on my appearance. This has been an improvement as when I was male, I did not care what I looked like. I honestly hated myself and it showed as people said I ‘looked’ mean. Although, I am one of the most tolerant people you could confront. I don’t like fighting because it is so primitive, and I tend to seek a more peaceful resolution to my problems.
At first, it was shaving on a daily schedule. I wanted to be rid of my facial hair badly. I then began shaving my whole body (besides the scalp and brows of course!). When my face failed to appear female (to my standards), Dr. Worth advised I start applying makeup to my face to conceal my facial hair and to make my face appear feminine.
5) Do you desire fuller lips?
A: Yes; having full lips in my opinion makes one ‘appear’ female. This also emphasizes lipstick color. However, I don’t want to look ridiculous! At this time, I’d like to see the philtrum shortened, but that would require surgical intervention. On January 2nd, I talked to my plastic surgeon about my lips and he believes they are full enough, just only needing to shorten the philtrum to bring the lip up to achieve a feminine appearance.
6) Has transitioning enhanced your desire to be a parent?
A: No. I have no desire to raise children in a society that punishes adults for disciplining their kids. I have seen what this generation is becoming and to say the least, it concerns me.
Personally, I have never wanted children as my life was interrupted by my failing health and I’ve never achieved financial stability. Secondly, with my health condition, it is highly unlikely I will see age 50; and it would not be right leaving the care of a child to a single parent.
Finally, I did ask my girlfriend about her opinion of having children and she is in agreement that due to my health and her psychiatric disabilities; we are not suitable genetic parents. However, we have thought of adoption if the moment arrives.
If we did adopt, I’d want a child under 1 year old. This is because I’ve seen what happens when you adopt an older child who is angry about their life they were born into.
7) How do you navigate the concept of sex while being dysphoric?
A: As David, I did not enjoy the concept of sex and lacked in the words to express why I felt this way. For the longest time, I thought the idea came from my religious upbringing, but it persisted as we grew closer. I left her very confused and unhappy. It is very rare to find a woman willing to jump in the sack before the guy!
Although I felt the sting of sexual arousal (which made me sick), I was left ashamed, unsatisfied and confused as why I could not perform as a man. Even when I wanted to be intimate, to kiss, hold and sleep together…I could not do it.
Once I started hormone replacement therapy, my sexuality seemed to kick into full drive, pushing me towards sexual liberation. I wanted to be kissed, I wanted to be touched and held. When I slept, I wanted someone there with me, holding me…intimacy became a desire.
I remember how scared I felt when I asked her to kiss and she was more then willing…we’ve waited for 12 years for this moment! Yet, I still can’t visualize ‘sex’ as a man…as a woman, possibly. But we need to build chemistry.
Although I don’t like talking about sexuality (you’ll find it rare in my blog), becoming a Trans-woman seems to have awakened my dormant sensual side. I find myself daydreaming of what it could be like after GRS and just going to bed each night held and touched. My skin…my whole body, it has changed in ways that is hard to describe.
 8) Do you believe that your brain has been feminized?
A: This is an opinionated question as even neurosciences can’t determine. I want to say yes. I am starting to subconsciously think of myself as female and adjusting my lifestyles to being female. Much of what makes females, females is cultural and family.
***
CULTURAL CHALLENGES (FOR TRANS-WOMEN)
1) Have you ever been outed for being Transgender?
A: No. I have yet to experience this embarrassment, but I am certain it will happen.
2) Have you ever been misgendered?
A: Many times. Between January 2019 to August 2019, I was constantly being misgendered when going out on the town or in the hospital.
However, my misgendering has decreased from October 2019 to now. I believe it is because I have began dressing as a female, my hair is much longer and facial features are taking on a feminine appearance.
Of all my misgendering experiences, none of them have been a challenge, most who misgender me immediately say they are sorry and continue on with whatever service they were hired to dispense.
3) Have you’ve been physically harmed because you are Transgender?
A: No. Most now seem to believe I am female.
4) Have you’ve been mentally harmed because you are Transgender?
A: Yes. Sadly, many of those who mentally harmed me were my own uncles and friends. Many did not accept my decision and have ousted me from their lives. Outside of my family and friends; I have not been placed in a mentally harmful situation. I have found that many have accepted who I have become, some happily
5) Have your family fully accepted who you are?
A: Mostly. My grandmother still stumbles with my name and sometimes uses my transgender nature against me. My mother has verbally said she is supportive of my decision, but isn’t pleased about it. My sister is the only one who is supportive, but not of any surgical intervention.
6) How do you deal with being misgendered by cis-people?
A: Typically, I’ll tell them that I am not offended; but only ask they use the proper pronouns and name from this point forward. A second offense will have me just correcting them politely and a third offense, I just ignore them as if they don’t exist. Figuring if they can’t respect me, and they are well informed, they don’t need any of my time.
7) How has been your experience with public restrooms?
A: As David, I never really considered the fear of the public restroom as I feel being Mira. There have been many times I have looked at the restroom and thought ‘Just go inside, no one will bother you!’
My first experience was at a local Shari’s restaurant in Port Orchard. I had been holding it in all night while I mixed music at a dangerous place to be a Trans, a biker’s bar! I remember thinking ‘Male or female?’ Kind of hard to be dressed as a woman with large boobs and be caught in a male’s restroom or risk a woman looking at my face at scolding me, calling me a pervert!
I went into the female’s restroom and found no one inside, so I hurried to a stall and locked myself inside…safe, but listening for the proper time to exit. When I left the stall, I did the world’s fastest handwash and out the door…I was so scared!
I still have yet to enter a populated woman’s restroom, and I’m certain that will be a unique blog post in its own!
8) If you are religious; has being Transgender conflicted with your spiritual care?
A: Yes…to an extent.
I was born Catholic and raised Lutheran…when I finally began transitioning, many of my closes church friends that I knew all my life turned away from me. I tried to attend a different Lutheran church in Allyn, Washington…but when they learned I was transgender, I was quickly shunned.
I have really never settled back into a church after my transition…but hope once I look female; I’ll return to a different congregation that will accept me as I am. And, as of lately, my old church where I grew up reached out to me, the new pastor welcoming me, understanding I am transgender and accepting me as I am. Yet, I still have not gone.
9) Do you feel comfortable answering simple questions about being Transgender by:
A)   Family: Yes. This was the hardest of all my people I came out to. Coming out to my mom was difficult as I did not want to be disowned by my own family. Family is everything to me…and I did not know how to talk to mom, my sister, grandmother or even uncles, aunts and cousins. I am comfortable about talking about my female side to them, but still leery about talking about the surgeries.
B)    Friends: Yes. If anyone that I opened up to…it was friends first. First my girlfriend and then closes friends on my Facebook account (losing about 10% of my friends).
C)    Strangers: Cautious. I’ve found that most people are courteous enough to be respectful, but I don’t get into details.
D)   Online: Yes. I have answered many questions via my Tumblr site about my Transgender experience and have also had to block a few ‘creepy’ people.
 10) What is something you loved to do that you are unable to do now as a Transgender woman?
A: Swimming. I was very active at my local YMCA’s deep water aerobics and shallow water aerobics classes. I would spend two hours swimming laps and each year attend a class to improve my swimming skills. Since HRT, my attendance at the local Y was twice this year.
I just don’t know how to dress and act while swimming. Swimming is like its own culture within a culture. I wish to dress is a female swimming suit, but first, they are rarely in my size and they would reveal my male anatomy. I’d be asking for trouble. If I wear my regular male swimming attire, I risk exposing my breasts if my outfit rises in the water.
***
LIFESTYLE CHANGES QUESTIONS
1) Have you grown your hair longer and/or modified it in the last year?
A: Yes. Prior to HRT; I only considered growing my hair only shoulder length. For a few months I found that having long hair was highly annoying and high maintenance. Since a year into my HRT, I have continued growing my hair with only one ‘layering’ trimming back in August 2019. At this time, I wish to grow my hair to the point that it touches my clavicles. I have began modifying its color from brown to blonde. I am hoping to achieve an 80% blonde with silver highlights and then dye the tips of my hair aquamarine blue.
2) Have you’ve worn makeup in the past year?
A: Yes; but I started late. I was advised by my physician to begin using makeup to hide my male blemishes (stubble). At this time, I am mainly using hues of blue, pink, yellow and silver. I mainly decorate my eyes (which is sort of pointless as it can’t be seen thanks to my male-brow) with eye shadow and highlight my cheeks to make them look fuller. I use to use foundation and primer, but I have not used those in the last two months as I don’t need them.
3) Have you’ve worn high heels in the past year?
A: No; I don’t like high heels…they are unstable and the major cause of ankle injuries. Also, I doubt they make a size 14-16 in women’s that I can buy local!
4) Have you’ve worn a skirt in the past year?
A: Yes; When I converted my wardrobe, I bought a purple skirt. I wasn’t certain about it; but love it. Since then, I own four skirts. The great thing about skirts is that unlike pants, they usually will fit nicer and hide anything ‘male’ that might give you away.
One thing that is certain! If you are going to wear a skirt, be sure to shave those legs. Another note, all my skirts go past my knees, I don’t like short skirts as they are ‘too’ revealing.
5) Have you’ve worn a dress in the past year?
A: Yes, three times. Once during an outing to Ocean Shores, again in the casino, once around the house (in Mason County) and again for Christmas morning. I also wore a dress for New Year’s Eve.
I like dresses, but you really can’t do much in them.
6) Have you’ve worn a blouse in the past year?
A: Yes, I own many blouses and they are my primary source of shirts in my wardrobe.
7) Have you’ve worn any form of bra in the past year?
A: Yes, I started wearing a bra when my back pain was becoming intolerable. I’ve been fitted with a 44C and then a 46D. I only own two bras (plunge) as they are terribly expensive!
8) Have you’ve worn any feminine undergarments in the past year?
A: Yes. I bought my first feminine undergarments in November 2019 and socks in December 2019. I have not bought any intimacy clothing as they are impractical.
9) Have you gotten your ears pierced?
A: No! I am not against earrings. I’ve seen some nice earrings out there that I’d love to wear, but I do not want to pierce my ears. I don’t like needles!
10) Have you started wearing ‘feminine’ jewelry?
A: Yes; Before HRT, I only wore a watch; now I wear a necklace. I currently have six necklaces: Mermaid Tail Necklace, Moonstone Necklace, Opal-Crystal Necklace, Abalone Necklace, Mermaid Necklace & a Aquamarine Necklace. I also wear 24/7 a moon-ring on my right hand which signifies my transition and keeps men from thinking I’m available.
11) If you had some ‘passing tips’ to offer other Transgender individuals, what are some things you do to pass?
A: The battle to pass as the opposite gender is as unique as the individual.
I have found that there is a list of things I must do in-order to pass successfully with a 20% chance of failure:
1—Clothing: How you dress will determine what people first see. Colors and patterns always attract the eye first. If you dress masculine, you’ll be perceived masculine and if you dress feminine, you’ll certainly be perceived feminine. Half of male clothing can double as female clothing, but you are putting yourself at risk if you are MtF.
Then again, don’t overdress and don’t underdress! Wear something that makes you comfortable, if you are not comfortable in your own clothing, it will show. Also, for MtF’s, be wary of patterns that might emphasize your male form.
2—Face: Your face will be your undoing as a transgender individual. For FtM, stay well-trimmed, shorten hair and lighten up on the jewelry and makeup. For MtF, stay well-shaved, style your hair and wear makeup that emphasizes your feminine features. FFS will help with the bones to open the eyes and smooth the jaw and nose (MtF) or reduce the cheeks and angle the jaw (FtM).
3—Voice: Work on your transgender voice…but don’t overstress it. If it sounds fake, it will lead to your downfall. I’ve seen videos of lovely Trans-women passing until they speak an it gives it away.
4—Confidence: If you think you are not passing; then there really is no reason to try. Most of the time when I’ve been misgendered, my confidence as Mira (believing I am a woman and not caring what any cis-individual says) has saved me from physical and emotional harm. Also, if I look conformable in my own skin, people say I seem to glow, bloom and just look beautiful…but when I’m doubting myself, my transgender nature brightly shows.
12) Have being transgender held you back from your career choice?
A: First off, I am medically disabled; so, this question can’t be answered in the way it was written. But before I began HRT, I’d say no.
If anything, accepting my transgender nature gave me the strength to pursue my career goals as an environmental educator and EMT. Before then, I only worked in dietary services…hired for my male strength and not brains. Hell, I even had a director at St. Anthony Hospital tell me I was only good for my muscles and not my mind.
As a transgendered individual; I began a new hobby…sound technology that has gotten me some uncertainty as I began as a man and ended up as a female. To be honest, they are not certain how to perceive me…even two of the vocalists refuse to call me Mira as it goes against their ideology…but I’m okay with it.
13) How is your relationship with your doctor?
A: Excellent. During my HRT, my primary doctor remained ignorant to my transgender health…I felt uncomfortable talking to him about my nature as a female (considering he wasn’t very compliant with my diagnosis of Asperger’s). He was my doctor in over 10 years! But he was David’s doctor and would not be suited to be Mira’s doctor.
So, I took a dangerous gamble. About a year into my HRT, I began searching for a new doctor that specialized in Transgender Health. I decided if I was going to become a woman, I needed a doctor I could trust and was conformable with me.
I transferred my care to Virginia Mason on Bainbridge (an hour drive away!) to have all my general and transgeneral care done. I certainly suggest that if you are transgender, find a doctor who is knowledgeable and willing to help you from the hormones to the surgery to the after years.
I know Dr. Worth was going to be a wonderful doctor for my care when she bluntly said: ‘You should know that I will not only treat you for your transgender health, but for your overall health. I will be overviewing your whole health as both female and male.’
***
COMPLIANCE QUESTIONS
1) Right now, are you complying to a feminine attire? What is it?
A: Yes. (Under shirt) A woman’s dress shirt with gold and blue embroidery (Top) A long black and white dress with swirl design patterns. Black Nylons, ladies’ garments, 44C bra and Dr. Scholl's work shoes.
2) Right now, are you in a relationship?
A: Yes; with a bisexual woman. We’ve been dating for 13 years.
3) Right now (without using goggle), write out something positive about yourself using the letters of your first name:
A: M—Mermaid I—Intelligent R—Resilient A—Admirable
4)     Please explain in your own words, your transition process and what you have gone through to transition into a transgender individual.
A: So, many people take a different path to reach their desired persona.
I actually began (attempting) transitioning in 2017, using herbal supplements which was a terrible idea. Don’t even waste your time doing this!
By November 2017, I contacted Cedar Rivers in Tacoma to enroll in their Transgender clinic and was placed on a four month wait list as they only enroll in February. By February 2018 I called once more and was given a delayed appointment because I failed to provide a transgender name (I hesitated over the phone as I was being careful as no one knew what I was doing and I wanted to have one year of hormone therapy under my belt before coming out.)
Delayed once more to May 2018, I met with one of their doctors and was started on a light dose of hormones as I only identified as genderfluid and only wanted to appear ‘remotely’ female, out of fear of retaliation from my family. However, as the hormones took effect, I would take a few pills a week and skip a week until July 2018 when I committed to the treatment.
I began estrogen in July 2018 and changed my label from gender nonconforming to genderfluid. From July 2018 to December 2018, nothing much happened.
By January 2019, I increased my dose of hormones and began to change finally. My changes were happened faster then I could photograph and with my year one coming up, Cedar River was preparing to drop my care.
I transferred to Virginia Mason in March 2019 and by April 2019, I legally switched my name and gender four month ahead of schedule.
By July, I began talking about facial feminization, breast augmentation and gender reassignment surgery with Dr. Worth, but denying consultation due to my health.
By September 2019, my breast growth made ‘not wearing’ a bra hell and I switch my wardrobe from male to female and began to separate myself from the life of David and being reborn as Mira. I finally came out to my biological family about my transgender nature and began to make amends.
October 2019, I finally scheduled an appointment with plastics to talk about facial feminization in 2020.
My last transition process was at Virginia Mason’s facial plastics clinic and after review; I was considered a candidate for surgery, but waiting on insurance’s reply…
Hypothetical Transition Process
January 2020: my first annual wellness checkup as a transgender female.
January 2020: begin referral process to plastics for breast augmentation.
February 2020: hear from Facial plastics about insurance decision.
March 2020: undergoing appeal for facial plastics or scheduling appointment for surgery.
March 2020: consultation with plastics for breast augmentation.
May 2020: check-up on facial plastics and/or breast augmentation.
October 2020: Begin talking about preparing for GRS.
November 2020: Look for a second psychologist to do evaluation for GRS.
December 2020: if facial plastics is still in appeal stage, should resolve by now.
2021: Retry FFS (or if surgery was performed, should be seeing my true face by now).
January 2021: If FFS was performed, begin breast augmentation surgery and/or start sending referrals to Oregon Health for GRS consultation.
January 2022: GRS performed.
5) Which feature of your body do you like the most since HRT?
A: My breasts…they have blossomed into something rather remarkable! It is amazing to think how at one time I could touch finger-tip to finger-tip while my palms covered my tiny nipples…now, I can’t even reach a single finger, not even with long nails!
It is hard to believe that my male chest could blossom into two womanly breasts.
6) Which feature of your body do you dislike the most since HRT?
A: I’d have to say my facial features. I don’t feel comfortable in public as my face still appears masculine. I spend the most time fretting over my facial features and if I am passing as female so I do get outed as being transgender.
7) With a New Year coming soon in a few hours; what is something you’d like to change for 2020?
A: I like to get back to swimming at the YMCA and start swimming laps. I use to spend 3-5 hours a day there and I’d like to get back at doing that. My ultimate goal is to save up my money to buy a mermaid tail and begin ‘mermaiding’. I currently have two fabric tails, but like to get is silicone tail.
8) With a New Year coming soon; what is your focus for 2020 regarding your ongoing battle with gender dysphoria?
A: Facial Feminization is a top priority with Breast Augmentation a close second. I have a FFS consultation on January 2nd 2020.
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(Taken October 2019 - 18 Months On HRT)
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s-k-y-w-a-l-k-e-r · 5 years
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22 Questions!
I was tagged by the always delightful @ilygwilym
1. name: Andrea 2. nickname: Always wanted to be Andy, but it never stuck! 3. star sign: Pisces 4. gender: Cis woman 5. sexuality: Straight 6. favourite colour: Green! 7. time right now: 3:54PM 8. average hours of sleep: 7ish 9. the last thing i googled: “media bias chart methodology”  10. number of blankets: One (plus a flat sheet of course). 12. what are you wearing right now: A black knee-length wrap dress with an orange Star Wars poncho I get a lot of compliments on 13. favourite book: idk man. Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, maybe 14. favourite musician(s): Queen, The Beatles, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Leon Bridges, Macklemore (so sue me), Flight of the Conchords 15. dream job: Presidential photographer 16. number of followers: 2400+ 17. when did you create your account: My main started in June 2009. This one started in April 2017. 18. what do you post about: Queen and Rami Malek mostly these days. Taika-verse, MCU, and of course Star Wars are always in the mix.  19. what made you get an account: When the first of the rebooted Star Trek movies came out, another website I used had a lot of people moving over here just to share pics and graphics in a way that the forums there could not. 20. when did your blog reach its peak: Oscar Night, 2019 21. do you get asks on a daily basis: Nah. 22. why did you choose your url: I love the word “Skywalker.” It jumped right out of Star Wars at me as a kid and I’ve always wanted my own sort of compound name like that (in Tatooine fashion- like Skywalker or Darklighter). SO now I have one picked out and I’ve started using it when I create new accounts. Considering switching this over to that here since I don’t do a lot of Star Wars these days, but now I kind of have a brand...
Tagging @ylly22 @mototwinkclub @malekedd @queenlagerthaa @deacydarling @michaellsheen @bruno-rami-taron-oh-my @lukeslywalkers @purepeanutbutter
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asyes · 5 years
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IMPORTANTE - IMPORTANT
Da quando ho 14 anni soffro di disturbi alimentari. Da quel momento il mio umore solare è svanito, e i momenti di vera felicità sono diventati rari. Il mio disturbo alimentare ha avuto diverse tappe:
inizialmente vedevo qualcosa di troppo nel mio corpo e alternavo digiuni e abbuffate, il così detto binge eating. Successivamente sono andata sottopeso, senza mai sfociare in anoressia, fortunatamente. Poi è tornato il binge. Qualche anno dopo, i miei genitori si sono separati, io avevo 17 anni, e sono impazzita, ho iniziato a soffrire di autolesionismo, oltre che di DCA, circa per un anno. Quell’estate dei 17 anni, in cui ho fatto i 18 anni,  dopo vari tentativi degli anni precedenti, sono riuscita ad assumere uno stile di vita sano, mangiavo bene, mi allenavo, e mi piaceva il mio fisico. Cominciato il quinto anno di liceo, tutta la positività è svanita e la storia è ricominciata da capo. Ma questa volta c’era qualcosa di diverso: il 3 novembre 2017 diventai la ragazza della persona più importante del mondo, quella persona che mi era stata sempre vicino, il mio migliore amico. Grazie a lui ho imparato e sto imparando ancora tanto, lui mi da positività e forza, non che gioia. In tutto questo tempo ho fatto molti tentativi per migliorare, e alla fine ho sempre fallito, ma in qualche modo mi sono rialzata, ogni volta, e ho continuato a lottare (il tutto intervallato da periodi in cui mi sono completamente demoralizzata e in cui non ho creduto minimamente in me stessa). Pian piano ho raggiunto dei piccoli obiettivi, ad esempio le abbuffate sono diminuite notevolmente e quando avvengono ingurgito molto meno cibo, sono molto più brevi e contenute.
Oggi ho 19 anni, quasi 20, e non mi piace ancora il mio corpo, non sono grassa, ma ho comunque una forma che guardandomi allo specchio non mi fa sorridere. Non ho un fisico che mi faccia sentire completamente a mio agio. In questa giornata del 13 marzo 2019 mi sono dedicata al relax, e dopo mesi ho avuto la forza, più che altro mentale, di allenarmi in casa.
Ho deciso di fare una CHALLENGE di 30 giorni, in cui monitorerò il cibo assunto (senza badare alle calorie, sarebbe la scelta peggiore, ciò che è importante sono i nutrienti) e l’esercizio fisico svolto.
Gli SCOPI sono tonificare il corpo, avere un organismo sano e sentirmi bene con me stessa.
Perché 30 giorni? È un tempo lungo, ma è proprio questo uno dei segreti, con cambiamenti graduali e impegno costante si ottengono risultati duraturi e si rispetta il proprio corpo.
Io ci ho messo ben 6 anni per rendermi conto di tutto ciò, e a mie spese, quindi fidatevi, so quello che vi dico, l’ho provato sulla mia pelle.  
INVITO tutti voi a partecipare assieme a me alla challenge, trasformando i vostri blog in un diario di condivisione di progressi sani, felici, cercando di eliminare per sempre, insieme, quella brama di far spuntare le ossa da ogni parte del corpo. Se viva ci possiamo tenere aggiornati, scrivetemi o CONDIVIDETE sui blog i vostri progressi. E questo importante messaggio, ci tengo che arrivi a più persone possibili, perché è una BATTAGLIA IMPORTANTE e farla INSIEME renderà tutto più facile e divertente.
È necessario sapere che durante questo percorso ci saranno momenti negativi, cadute, ma ci facciamo forza e ci rialziamo, perché sono inevitabili, e solo rialzandoci riusciremo a raggiungere i nostri obiettivi.
In conclusione, nei prossimi 30 giorni pubblicherò le mie giornate alimentari e di esercizio fisico, consigli e tanto altro in base alla mia esperienza personale.
Se deciderete di partecipare, sarò a vostra disposizione per qualsiasi cosa, e vi starò accanto.
Non abbiate paura, non sarete e non siete soli.
Spero di aiutarvi e di essere un’ispirazione per voi, d’ora in poi.
Bacioni,
@asyes
 ENGLISH VERSION 
Since I'm 14 years old I suffer from eating disorders. Since then my solar mood has vanished, and moments of true happiness have become rare. My eating disorder has had several stages:
Initially I saw something too much in my body and I alterned fasts and Binges, the so-called Binge Eating. Then I went underweight, without ever flowing into anorexia, fortunately. Then came back the Binge. A few years later, my parents separated, I was 17, and I went crazy, I started to suffer self-harm, as well as DCA, about for a year. That summer Of the 17 years, in which I made the 18 Years after Several attempts of previous years, I was able to take a healthy lifestyle, I ate well, I trained, and I liked my physique. Began the fifth year of high school, all the positivity It vanished and the story started again. But this time there was something different: on November 3, 2017 I became the girl of the most important person in the world, that person who had always been near me, my best friend. Thanks to him I learned and I'm still learning so much, he'll me by positivity and strength, not that joy. In all this time I have made many attempts to improve, and in the end I always failed, but somehow I got up, every time, and I kept fighting (All interspersed with periods when I was completely demoralized and in which I did not believe minimally in myself). I gradually reached small goals, for example the Binges have decreased considerably and when they happen gulp much less food, they are much shorter and contained.
Today I am 19 years old, almost 20, and I still do not like my body, I am not fat, but I still have a shape that looking at me in the mirror does not make me smile. I don't have a physique that makes me feel completely comfortable. On this day of March 13, 2019 I dedicated myself to relax, and after months I had the strength, more than any other mental, to train in the house.
I decided to do a 30-day CHALLENGE, where I will monitor the food taken (regardless of calories, it would be the worst choice, what is important are the nutrients) and exercise done.
The aims are to tone the body, have a healthy organism and feel good about myself.
Why 30 days? It is a long time, but it is just this one of the secrets, with changei Gradual and constant commitment you get lasting results and you respect your body.
I took 6 years to realize all this, and at my expense, so trust me, I know what I tell you, I felt it on my skin.  
I invite all of you to participate with me in the challenge, transforming your blog into a diary of sharing healthy progress, happy, trying to eliminate forever, together, that lust to tick the bones from every part of the body. If you live we can keep up to date, write or share on the blog your progress. And this important message, I want you to get to as much people as possible, because it's an important battle and doing it together will make everything easier and fun.
It is necessary to know that during this journey there will be negative moments, falls, but we force ourselves and raise ourselves, because they are inevitable, and only when we get up we will be able to achieve our goals.
In conclusion, in the next 30 days I will publish my food and exercise days, advice and much more based on my personal experience.
If you decide to participate, I will be at your disposal for anything, and I will stand next to you.
Do not be afraid, you will not be and you are not alone.
I hope to help you and be an inspiration to you from now on.
Kisses
@asyes
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1 November 2019
Bits and pieces
So:
There's an election coming. Finally. Stay tuned to the IfG for all your election needs - and lots of #dataviz, of course *fires up live-blog*
A plea: can we have some useful visualisation about the election results rather than flash but feeble fatuous 3D flapdoodle please? (Yes, broadcasters, I'm looking at you)
Another plea - we've been trying to keep track of MPs announcing they won't stand again in the next election. Spreadsheet here, thread here - get in touch if you spot any we've missed
The subject line on last week's email - 8 March 2019 - was a genuine error and not some deliberate witty comment on the Brexit process and how we haven't moved on since March
Inevitably I missed a brilliant newsletter out of last week's list: Martin Belam's Friday Reading. Last week's included this on the Aberfan disaster
Some great jobs this week (though, as per, subscribe to Jukesie's newsletter if that's what you're after). Of particular note: the brilliant Rachel Rank is stepping down as CEO of 360Giving, a story of real open data impact - an amazing job for someone, and huge shoes to fill. Sam Tazzyman - who gave one of the best Data Bites presentations we've had - has also been in touch with various MoJ jobs, which you can find below
Speaking of Data Bites... there are still a few places left for next Wednesday's event, where we'll hear from Ordnance Survey, the Oil & Gas Authority and the Race Disparity Unit and from DCMS on the National Data Strategy. Join us! Or watch the livestream.
Another data-driven IfG event for your diaries - join us on Wednesday 13 November for the launch of our latest Performance Tracker report on public services.
And finally...
The IfG has launched a new podcast. I am on this week's edition with something completely different. You'll have to listen when it goes live later. But on a completely unrelated note, here are some links about data sonification:
Der Sound zum tiefen Fall der SPD (Berliner Morgenpost)
The gender pay gap in many countries is exacerbated by parenthood—you can hear it in the data* (The Economist)
Chart doctor: the mysterious music of the yield curve* (FT)
Sonification - 50 Years of Income Inequality (Naughty Step)
Data sonification lets you literally hear income inequality (Mic)
What the world map sounds like on a piano (John Keats)
What the world map sounds like on a piano - alternative version (HybridShark)
Have a great weekend, and hopefully see some of you at #odcamp on Sunday
Gavin
Today's links:
Graphic content
The never-ending festival of fun
MPs standing down - thread (me for IfG)
Composition of the Commons (me for IfG)
Membership change (Ketaki for IfG)
Commons defeats (me for IfG)
General elections - days and months (me for IfG)
Vote against a general election (Marcus for IfG)
Vote for a general election (Ketaki for IfG)
How Members of Parliament Voted on Johnson’s December Election Bill* (Bloomberg)
Brexit’s ‘Super Saturday’ (Reuters - a few weeks ago but good)
Countdown to GE2019 (Institute for Government)
‘Toxic’ tweets aimed at MPs soar after Johnson outburst* (FT - with bonus marimekko)
parli-n-grams, now back to 1919 (Giuseppe)
UK general election poll tracker* (FT)
Who is winning the race for 10 Downing Street?* (The Economist)
Why UK election outcome is impossible to predict (Politico)
British politicians - popularity vs fame (BuzzFeed via Duncan Weldon)
Last Orderrrrs! Speaker John Bercow's career in numbers (BBC News)
Politics everywhere else
RESULTADOSEN TODO EL PAÍS (La Nacion)
Landtagswahl 2019 in Thüringen (Thüringer Allgemeine)
Umfragen sind besser als ihr Ruf (Süddeutsche Zeitung)
Weapons of mass control, tactics of mass resistance (Reuters)
People
Ageing, fast and slow: When place and demography collide (Resolution Foundation)
Societies change their minds faster than people do* (The Economist)
The global fertility crash* (Bloomberg)
China worries about its bulging waistlines* (The Economist)
Everything else
Thanks, Whistle-Blower, Your Work Is Done* (New York Times)
Maps: California Fires, Evacuation Zones and Power Outages* (New York Times)
Visualizing personal notes on the history of Western Philosophy (via Alberto Cairo)
How we stopped making all graphics by hand and started printing from our graphics toolbox (NZZ Visuals)
Scraping Hansard with Python and BeautifulSoup (Phil Gorman)
Meta data
UK government
UK lags in Capgemini e-gov rankings for Europe (UKAuthority)
An interview with John Pullinger, former UK National Statistician (Civil Service Quarterly)
Measuring Defence productivity: a first step (Civil Service Quarterly)
Safeguarding our nation's story (Civil Service Quarterly)
DATA-DRIVEN HEALTHCARE: REGULATION & REGULATORS (Reform)
Data as institutional memory (Adam Locker)
Linked identifier schemes: Best practice guide (Geospatial Commission)
Your face or mine
Live facial recognition technology – police forces need to slow down and justify its use (ICO)
Ada Lovelace response
Why did Microsoft fund an Israeli firm that surveils West Bank Palestinians? (NBC News)
Electoral dysfunction
Under the radar: the battle in the online campaigns (Sky News)
Crossing Divides: How a social network could save democracy from deadlock (BBC Click)
Data protection experts want watchdog to investigate Conservative and Labour parties (Sky News)
Revealed: The fearsome data targeting machine that will power Labour's next election campaign – and why some of it could be illegal* (Telegraph)
Twitter's canny political ad ban costs it little – and piles pressure on Facebook (The Guardian)
Key election safeguards won't be ready for December poll (Sky News)
We’ve made the decision to stop all political advertising on Twitter globally... (@jack)
Everything else
Distracted by Data (Elizabeth M. Renieris, Berkman Klein Center)
WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (RSA)
A biased medical algorithm favored white people for health-care programs (MIT Technology Review)
Book Review | Charles Booth’s London Poverty Maps (LSE British Politics and Policy)
From PDFs to Machine-readable planning data: progress on changing London’s planning system (Smart London)
Media amnesia and the Facebook News Tab (Emily Bell, CJR)
The Internet and the Third Estate (Stratechery)
Opportunities
JOB: Chief Executive Officer (360Giving)
JOB: Grade 7 Senior Interaction Designer (MHCLG)
JOB: Research Assistant or Associate (Global Data Barometer)
JOB: Lead, OGP Local (Open Government Partnership)
OPPORTUNITY: Data Justice Fellowship (Data Justice Lab)
EVENT: Performance Tracker launch - Election 2019: The next five years of spending on public services (Institute for Government)
And MoJ have been in touch with some jobs:
Come and join the Data Engineering team here at MoJ!
We’re doing modern data engineering in Python using AWS, Docker, Kubernetes, and Airflow, and incorporating automated testing, CI/CD workflows, and all of that good stuff. We’re making a genuine difference to how data flows around the Ministry of Justice. Our team and influence are growing all the time. In this recruitment round we are seeking people at three different levels of seniority, and are generally looking for people with coding experience who want to learn about and influence how analysis and data science are going to be done in the near future. Come and be part of a revolution in how data is done in government!
Grade 7
Band B / SEO
Band C / HEO
And finally...
Season's greetings
Halloween... (Keri Blakinger and George Greenwood)
Daylight savings: Brits take lighter evenings over an extra hour in bed (YouGov)
Hellvetica
Haunted houses have a chilling effect on the property market* (The Economist)
Everything else
Bar chart race: NHL top 25 all-time point scorers (Neil Richards)
Every Proper Noun on Kanye West’s Jesus Is King, Charted and Annotated (Slate)
UI vs. UX (Chris Albon)
Swearing on Mumsnet's 'Brexit' board (via Jonathan)
Winning here... (Bath and North East Somerset Lib Dems)
#datagovernance (via Sean McDonald)
Laughing On Line (The Pudding)
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