tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2516214501565726601.post896902481152411917..comments2023-10-10T02:33:10.811-07:00Comments on Why be a TV?: Man I Feel Like A Woman !Johnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16928099474442550576noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2516214501565726601.post-37822989997984752282014-01-15T18:39:40.987-08:002014-01-15T18:39:40.987-08:00While we cannot describe what another person "...While we cannot describe what another person "feels", we can certainly apply a behaviour analysis as a consequence of those feelings. And doing that it's quite easy to prove that a large number of crossdressers do, indeed, express the same range of emotions and feelings as women do, and much less of the range of emotions and feelings that males express.<br /><br />Obviously every individual is different, and behaviour analysis only works on averages. My own wife, for instance, is far more aggressive and rational than most males I know — much more than me! — but she also loses her temper in a very feminine way :)<br /><br />So it's complicated. I think that one can postulate the argument that <em>some</em> crossdressers do, indeed, express female feelings as analysed by their behaviour, but that this is not universal among all crossdressers. Nevertheless, RMI has shown that at least from the outside, the brain scans of certain types of male crossdressers — and certainly many MtF transgendered people — do, indeed, look similar to brain scans of genetic females, while being at odds with brain scans of genetic males without crossdressing urges. However, it's still early to say what is cause and what is effect; we already know how well our brain gets constantly re-wired by our own mind, so perhaps these studies are just showing that certain crossdressers, by wishing to feel like a woman, reflect on their brain scans similar activity patterns as women do. If that's the case, well, the brain scans would prove nothing except the extreme plasticity of the brain! But it's too early to say what interpretation is correct.Sandra M. Lopeshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00008119198361090865noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2516214501565726601.post-66611465403144479272013-06-02T19:42:43.684-07:002013-06-02T19:42:43.684-07:00I found your blog post on this site:
http://www.c...I found your blog post on this site:<br /><br />http://www.catherinel.tvheaven.com/custom.html<br /><br />Thank you for this blog post! It is the most informative piece on the TV phenomenon that I have yet found. I'm a student researching skirts in Western society. Now I see that I have been barking up the wrong tree! TV is really much more than the choice to wear cross-gender clothing. <br /><br />Your analysis is fascinating. It's great to find something written from personal experience. I wonder, is there also a community of women dressing up as men, for similar reasons? It would be interesting to interview them and see if their experiences correlate with yours.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2516214501565726601.post-51041255766914256492011-08-03T13:37:39.511-07:002011-08-03T13:37:39.511-07:00Well, I am a woman and I'm with a transgender ...Well, I am a woman and I'm with a transgender parterner and I feel like He is a she trapped in a male body. The brain of every individual is differant so who's to say that a man doesn't have the same thoughts and brain chemistry as a woman as well as the feelings and urges. Some may argue that these circumstances would classify some one as homosexual, but it acctualy doesn't.<br />Sexual arousal to and wanting to be the opposite gender are two completely differant things. I love being a woman and I am attracted to both sexes (which some say that bisexuality is false or is a choice are wrong.) Sexual orientation is most of the time genetic and if two straight people had a child there is the possibility for the atraction to males and females to occure (along with hetero and homosexuality).<br />Now, back to the original topic, Cross-dressers don't feel the same as a woman does completely. They feel it in a shallower form since they don't have the same estregin levels as a woman would, however transvestites do because the take estregin. So in a way transvestites feel more feminine or more like a woman than Cross dressers can.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2516214501565726601.post-44600652695046015732010-05-15T01:14:51.866-07:002010-05-15T01:14:51.866-07:00I think it's more than that. The urge to dres...I think it's more than that. The urge to dress and present occurs in me when i see a pretty girl. It's a feminine competitive urge. I don't think it would matter what culture I was in - be it western dressed culture, or a primitive african culture where the women wear practically no clothes but decorate themselves.<br /><br />I have a screen saver and when it shows certain pictures, i often feel a sudden urge. And note, that if you end your cross-dressing episodes with maturbation (which often results in the urge suddenly and completely disappearing), then you've essentially gone through a feminine mating cycle. dress up, attract a male, have sex, feel release. you just played the feminine role, start to finish.<br /><br />if there are gender differences in erogenous zones (a questionable possibility), i wouldn't be surprised to find that cross-dressers have erogenous zones that are more like females than like males, so they respond to wearing feminine clothes, which are arguably much more sensual and tactile than male clothes.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com