Shemales Fucking Crossdressers

Shemales Fucking Crossdressers




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Shemales Fucking Crossdressers
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Before and after with my girlfriend ❤ - transtimelines
Transition has been hard but I’m finally seeing (and feeling) the old disappear. Everything’s changed for this mom, including love ❤️ 2015-2018, descriptions in album - Imgur
MTF, same pose, 2 months pre-HRT vs 12ish months HRT, 31 yrs
Day 1 to One Year HRT! MTF : transtimelines

CROSSDRESSERS IN BLACK PANTYHOSE ONLY

View all All Photos Tagged crossdresser



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Connecting people through photography.


Lost a chunk of money to rug pulls 😒
Nothing to do but be smarter, work more, and build myself up again.
Another modeling shot. Rocking this Roanyer breastplate.
I'm never going to get married so I might as well get my mileage from this dress 😊
My casual look! A friend sent me a bunch of leggings and I LOVE them! Thank you Scalliwag!
Aaaand I just keep posting the most boring pics possible 😜
Another modeling shot for Roanyer. Check out those seams!
Finally got the dress again. The face says it all...
One of Sarah's favorite oufits. Girdle,stockings,bra baby doll. mules.
Just love playing with different hair styles.
Mom, please stop yelling at me! I never wanted to wear your dresses; it was sis! She made me!
A little photoshopped skirt twirling.
white lace crop top, animal print mini skirt, white ankle socks, nude high heel sandals
Great dresses for going out for the evening.
peach lace top, black tulle skirt, peach ankle socks, black high heel pumps
I see Sarah left her screen get too close to her lips.
A close up of me. in one of my favorite evening gowns.
found this one at the new year sales very pretty dress I love it
These were taken later on in 2004. Just a relaxed kind of pose.
Rocking and loving these shiny leggings!
matching floral top and ruffle mini skirt

Some, but not all, crossdressers are gay
Some crossdressers have a level of gender dysphoria, but many do not.

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If you have ever read the introduction to The Crossdresser Report , you already know that one of the main goals is to inform new crossdressers. Sometimes it is hard to find good information, and The Crossdresser Report strives to bring good information to you.
This article is not for all crossdressers. If you clearly understand where you stand as a crossdresser, why you do it, and where you stand on the gender spectrum, this article is not for you. However, if you are unclear and are still gathering information, please continue reading!
Back when I was in math class, I learned about Venn Diagrams. These represent groups of things, and whether there is an overlap between these groups. I think a few Venn Diagrams will be useful for bringing up some points about crossdressers. These can be useful for understanding where you fit into the big scheme of things, especially when you aren’t quite certain where that fit is.
For example, one question a new crossdresser may ask is whether being a crossdresser automatically makes one gay. For myself, I am 100% certain that I am not gay. However, I am also 100% certain that there also are gay people who crossdress.
In this Venn Diagram, the two circles represent these two groups of people, crossdressers and gays. The red circle is the group of people who are crossdressers. The green circle shows people who are gay. The overlapping area in the middle represents those who are crossdressers that are gay.
I am in the red crossdresser circle but not in the overlapping area because I am a straight crossdresser. I know people who are gay but not crossdressers. Those people are in the right side of the green circle.
Another question that a new crossdresser sometimes asked is whether crossdressing is a gateway towards transitioning to the other gender. That is, am I transgender?
Unlike the straight vs. gay question, the question of whether I personally am transgender is not clear to me. For other crossdressers, it is as cut and dry as I am about being straight. For those crossdressers, there is no question that they don’t have any desire to transition to the opposite gender.
The word transgender is sometimes confusing because its meaning has changed over time. For some, it is an umbrella term used for people who stray from the traditional gender norms established by the society in which they live. I prefer this broader definition, and all crossdressers fit into that definition.
However, the popular understanding of the term transgender has been shifting to mean people who are transitioning their gender. These are the people for whom the gender assigned at birth doesn’t match their experience of their true selves. It can be a very mild awareness of this mismatch, or it can be so pronounced that only a physical change to the body will resolve it. The common medical term for this mismatch is gender dysphoria . This is the definition of transgender I am using for this article.
Personally, I’ve come to the conclusion that I am somewhere in the middle. However, I have yet to discover exactly where I fit. It’s crossdressers like this who will find this article most helpful.
I subscribe to a number of crossdressing YouTube channels. YouTube uses these subscriptions to help you find other videos of interest. One of the recommendations was a video published by The Transition Channel .
Alexis Ungerer, PhD., is a gender therapist who started this valuable YouTube resource. I think the best thing about her videos is that she really does understand what makes people like us tick. In addition, she is very knowledgeable and does a great job of presenting the information in an understandable manner. It is these three things, understanding, authority, and presentation, that make her videos shine.
If you want to learn how to apply makeup or purchase the right wig for you, you won’t find videos for those topics on The Transition Channel . Fortunately, there are plenty of other places to find those “how to” types of videos,
If, however, you are wanting to ponder more about the “why” rather than the “how to”, The Transition Channel is a wonderful resource. I found the videos so insightful that I binged on half a dozen in a row! I feel that they are such an important resource for crossdressers who are wondering about their own “why” that I want to publicize this YouTube channel as soon as I could.
I found several of the videos to be quite helpful in my case, where I am still trying to understand my personal “why”. I have watched the videos but have not yet gone through them in detail, as it pertains to my situation. After I work through that exercise, I plan to write about what I’ve discovered.
In the meantime, feel free to take a look at the videos that I plan to cover later.
If you are a crossdresser who has questions about where you really stand on the gender spectrum, I think the videos on The Transition Channel can really help you gain some understanding about yourself.
I also think that if you firmly fit into the non-transgender side of the Venn diagram, watching some of these videos will help you to understand those who do. It isn’t always easy to understand other perspectives. The Transition Channel provides the education you need to try to gain that understanding.
Personally, I find The Transition Channel to be quite amazing. Does this channel amaze you as well? I would love to read your opinion about whether more of this type of information is something you are seeking from The Crossdresser Report . If not, what types of articles are of interest to you as a crossdresser? Please leave your comments below .
p.s., Here are some of my other popular articles for crossdressers. Enjoy!
What did you think about this article? Did you find the videos helpful to you? Leave a comment .
Would you do me a favor? If you know someone who would find this article useful, would you please share it? It is as easy as clicking one of the buttons below. Thank you!
Sami has been a part-time crossdresser for about 5 years. Although she still has a lot to learn herself, she is enjoying teaching new crossdressers tips that will hopefully help them on their adventure.
Besides enjoying her time with her family and working as a web developer, Sami loves to travel, make home improvements, and create jewelry in her spare time.
Read more about Sami by clicking her name.
Good article. If time permits I will check out the you tubes you suggest.
Thank you
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Sami has been a part-time crossdresser for about 5 years. Although she still has a lot to learn herself, she is enjoying teaching new crossdressers tips that will hopefully help them on their adventure.
Besides enjoying her time with her family and working as a web developer, Sami loves to travel, make home improvements, and create jewelry in her spare time.
Read more about Sami by clicking her name.

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A few years ago, as transgender issues leaped to the forefront of the cultural conversation, some famous and otherwise outspoken trans people were quick to steer the focus away from “the surgery.”
Many will remember the moment back in January 2014 when actress Laverne Cox schooled Katie Couric, after Couric ask an invasive question about her body. “The preoccupation with transition and surgery objectifies trans people,” Cox told Couric. “The reality of trans people’s lives is that so often we are targets of violence. We experience discrimination disproportionately to the rest of the community. Our unemployment rate is twice the national average [ . . . ] The homicide rate is highest among trans women. If we focus on transition, we don’t actually get to talk about those things.”
For the most part, people have respected that request. But according to my friend Nomi Ruiz, this has inadvertently created a taboo in the trans community: Nobody talks about sex. Nomi is a transgender singer and host of the podcast Allegedly NYC . “Right now there’s a lot of sensitivity around trans issues,” Nomi told me recently. “At times this makes it easier to communicate, but it also makes people afraid of offending someone, and prevents people from getting deeper into a conversation.” Nomi is concerned, in particular, about the lack of conversation around sex for women who have had sex reassignment surgery (SRS), and the real-life implications the operation can have on their sexual experience. “A lot of girls won’t even talk about it among themselves,” she said. “But I’d like to be someone who can open up this conversation.”
Now, I’m a cis person, and therefore have no personal insight to share on this seemingly off-limits subject. But I do know well that, when dealing with sexuality or any other sensitive topic, it is generally useful to hear the stories of people with experiences similar to your own, because it helps you to better understand your own experience and your own body. It helps you to not feel so fucking alone, basically. And I think Nomi’s concern poses a delicate question: Is it time for a nuanced discussion about sex and pleasure for trans women? Has the cultural conversation around trans culture progressed enough?
Over Chardonnay in Bushwick, Brooklyn, I sat down with Nomi to talk about sex. “I think a lot of people, when they think of trans females, they think ‘a girl with a penis,’” she said. “And if you’re post-op, they think you just had your penis cut off. There’s still this shock factor to having a sex change. People think, ‘Eww, that’s so horrible’ or ‘That’s so crazy .’”
According to Nomi, these misconceptions are common even within her own, progressive social scene. “Sometimes, if I’m dating a guy but I don’t want to sleep with him right away, he’s like, ‘Oh, because it doesn’t work.’ Or people think you can’t orgasm. They don’t realize the reality. But if they knew how beautiful and how natural the vagina really is, and how it’s so in tune with your mind and your body, I think people would start seeing it as sexy rather than as a science experiment. I mean, even I didn’t know the possibilities.”
Nomi said that as she was preparing for SRS, she wished there were more women talking about their experiences of sex after surgery, because she felt sort of in the dark. “There was this myth that you could never have another orgasm, that there’s no sensitivity, and that you could never enjoy sex again,” Nomi said. “So there was always that fear and that risk. But eventually I got to the point where I was like, ‘I don’t care. I’d rather not enjoy sex than live this way.’”
Nomi had SRS five years ago, in her mid-20s. “The conversation with my doctor beforehand was hilarious, because it’s sort of customized,” Nomi said. “She asked me: What are you looking to achieve? Like, are you a lesbian, are you interested in being penetrated? Is it more important to focus on the nerve endings in your clit, or do you want a lot of depth? Or do you want both? I was like, ‘I want it all. Go for gold.’”
Like any major surgery, there is a lengthy recovery period. “I was in bed for a month, and after that, there’s a dilation process,” Nomi said. “They give you four dilators, with a ruler on them. You’re basically fucking yourself: You slowly increase the size, so that you keep the depth and width you’ve achieved.” This process takes six months. “And then you have to dilate once a week for the rest of your life, unless you’re having sex,” Nomi continued. “So now when I’m not having sex, it’s kinda sad, because you’re really reminded of it. You’re like, ‘Oh, God, I have to dilate now because I’m not getting laid. Fuck.’”
(It’s important to note here that Nomi’s experience is not every trans woman’s experience. The process of altering one’s birth sex is complex, happens over a long period of time, and does not always involve surgery. SRS is only one small part of transition, and not all transgender people choose to, or can afford to, undergo surgery. Though it’s sort of strange to think of SRS as a privilege, there are many transgender people who want SRS but do not have access to it. For this and other reasons, sex change and post-op are outdated terms, and are used in this article only in direct quotations.)
At first, Nomi said, she was hesitant to jump into being sexually active: “I didn’t want to give my vagina to every guy, because I was like, ‘Duh, it’s brand-new!’” When she did start having sex, it felt kind of weird for a while. “I was really self-conscious, because I was blaming all of the awkward sex on my neo-vagina,” Nomi said. “I was like, Maybe it’s not working. It’s not like other girls’ vaginas. It’s not right. I’m not getting pleasure.” The first time she got head, it basically felt like nothing, so she called up her BFF, a cis girl, in a panic. “I was like, ‘Girl, is it normal to just feel like you’re rubbing on a carpet when a guy is eating you out?!’ She was like, ‘Oh, girl, yeah, sometimes it’s a fucking nightmare.’”
Nomi was faced with a harsh reality: A lot of guys just aren’t that great with their tongue. “I realized he just wasn’t good at it,” Nomi said. “But then, when I met a guy who was good at it, I was like, ‘Oh, duh, okay, it really depends. It’s not like jerking off a penis.’ When I had better lovers, things changed. It took meeting the right guy, slowly fingering me, seeing how I reacted. You need someone to help you enjoy your body, not someone who just wants to fuck you.”
As she continued to explore her body, sex became better than she ever imagined. “When I was turned on, I would get really wet, and I was shocked, because I’d never heard a [trans] girl say that her vagina got wet,” she said. “I didn’t realize that it would be this beautiful, natural part of me. I was like, ‘Holy shit, this is beyond what I thought my sex life could be.’” She paused for dramatic effect. “But I still love anal sex. The best sex is if we do both. But I learned that you can’t go back and forth, because I got a UTI from that. I was like, ‘Fuck, this is what having a vagina is like?!’ My friend was cracking up, like, ‘Girl, you wanted a pussy.’ I was like, ‘This is too real.’”
Other changes Nomi noticed were more mental than physical. “Before [SRS], sex was almost violent,” she said. “It was like shooting a gun, like I’ve got to get rid of this. But now I really have to be present and be into the person in order for my body to react. Like, my vagina will basically reject a penis if I’m not into the sex. But if I am into it, it gets really open and moist. I feel sex is more attached to my brain now. And I can keep having more sex after I orgasm, whereas before, after I came, I was like, ‘I’m done, thanks.’”
In other words, Nomi’s experience became an almost clichéd account of sex as a woman—i.e., often, reaching orgasm can feel like an epic psychological journey that requires laser focus. You have to be in the right headspace, with the right atmosphere. You know, candles or whatever. And Nomi isn’t the only trans woman I’ve heard say this. On YouTube, there’s a small community of transgender women who talk about sex (among other issues), and many of them echo this sentiment. In one particularly funny video, posted
Cheryl Deville
Alessandra Miller Tube
Naked Chubby Moms

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