UvaUvamVivendoVariaFit
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2026
Yeah. My favourite thing in a relationship is when my partner adds and removes body parts.
Keeps it interesting you know.
thread tax; Self realisation hits hard
View attachment 8847157
You know, as much as troons have burned through any initial goodwill I once held towards them and replaced it with well-earned revulsion and loathing, sometimes shit like this can still stir up a bit of pity. What a waste. These men were sold a lie, and it consumed them. What if, instead of ever being offered the entirely false option of changing the immutable and not being men, and wasting all of their time and energy and focus on this bullshit, they were instead encouraged to decide what kind of men they wanted to be and put their efforts towards living up to that while accepting the things they can't change about themselves? Would any have become good men, or would they all still be just as awful in different ways?None of them pass. They will always be a man. The sooner they get over that the sooner they can stop being annoying and disgusting faggots.
People who've lived through true hardship, survived terrible things, tend to look for ways to come to terms with it that allow them some peace of mind and move past it. Look for things to be grateful for, however small, or ways to laugh at it, or to forgive those responsible, or to feel a little bit of control over their own lives, anything to help them cope with what happened and can't be changed, maybe to find a way to live with a little bit of grace. Meanwhile these chucklefucks are looking for any way they can to twist perfectly normal experiences until they can wring as much aggrievement out of it as possible to try to justify wallowing in it, blaming everything and everyone else possible, anything to avoid taking real ownership over the consequences of their own stupid choices. Your body being allowed to function like a healthy body doesn't make you a victim, Brian. You are an imposter, feeling like one is just basic self-awareness.some time ago, i heard something somewhere that said "once you truly accept trans women as women, you see just how horrifying their experience was growing into their adult body". and it stuck with me. it changed the way i viewed my transition. its not that im "envious" of women, its literally that i *am* a woman who was unable to receive the medical intervention accompanied with gender dysphoria, and testosterone was allowed to run rampant on my body for 28 years. this realization has been both positive and negative.
positive: I no long experience imposter syndrome nearly as frequently as I did, and it's helped me embody femininity in a more organic and comfortable way
negative: the things about my body that are still masculine cause me far greater levels of dysphoria now, as they genuinely feel like they don't belong and are foreign. chest hair, prominent chin and brows, the shape of my body, still developing breasts, etc.
so while on one hand I have a better mental disposition about my transness, on the other hand I've become almost depressingly anxious for FFS and all the rest of the feminizing procedures/hormonal induced changes.
maybe someone will relate/find this helpful.









