Teen Transvestite

Teen Transvestite




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Teen Transvestite
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NEW BALTIMORE, Mich. (WJBK) - A local mom is going viral over a big decision to give her teenager hormones to transition into a female. The video is being shared millions of times on Facebook tonight and now Erica Maison is talking about her decision.
Anticipation and excitement was on display as the 14-year-old New Baltimore girl opened a hidden box from her mother. It wasn't jewelry or concert tickets.
"Do you know what that is?" Erica asked, as Corey smiles and moves toward mom for a tearful hug.
Corey's mom surprised her with her first dose of hormones, something the transgendered teen has waited to get for three years. Erica wanted to capture the emotional moment.
"I just started crying," Erica says.
"I opened it, I read the top and it said 'estrogen, Corey says. “I stopped and froze for a second. I was so happy I started crying."
"It was such a relief," Erica says. "It had been so many years waiting."
It hasn't been easy for Corey who was born a boy and feels she spent the first decade of her life living in someone else's body. The signs started young.
"My second birthday I got a truck, my sister got a Barbie doll and I wanted nothing to do with the truck," Corey remembers.
"[Corey would] dress up in my heels and dresses," Erica says. "All little boys do that, that is a phase usually. As Corey gets to be 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 years old, it didn't stop."
They say everything became clear when they found online videos from Jazz Jennings, one of the youngest publicly documented people to be identified as gender dysphoric, or a person who identifies with a different gender than they were born with.
"I blurted out, 'I'm just like her!'" Corey says.
Corey's turning point was at 10 years old. After extensive research by mom and evaluations by a medical team at a gender clinic in Chicago, Corey received an implant to begin hormone suppression.
"The hardest part for me was the journey I knew we had ahead of us," says Erica. “Negativity scared me as a mom."
Like so many transgendered teens, the 8th grader has had to deal with bullies and cruel comments. But with the help of counselors, her supportive parents, siblings and friends, she is learning to overcome it.
All of it leading to this pivotal moment, receiving her long-awaited estrogen and go ahead from the doctors. A moment mom knew would mean the world to her little girl.
"It was like a dream, it was surreal," Erica says.
"It was the best feeling ever," Corey says. "Like, I told my mom, I felt like I was in a box in a long, long time and I was just unlocked."
See the original video below.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2022 FOX Television Stations

Teenage transvestite escort who’s slept with 300 married men in 5 months and made £40,000
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Tashion had slept with 300 married men and now earns 8,000 a month from escorting, charging £400 for two hours
A 19-year-old transvestite claims to have slept with more than 300 married men she met online in just five months.
College student Tashion EJ Taylor, from Cheshire, expected no responses when she went on dating sites to gain acceptance, after transitioning at the age of 16.
However within 24 hours her inbox was inundated with messages from interested admirers.
Finding comfort in her new-found online acceptance, Tashion started responding to her growing following of suiters.
Attracting men aged between 30 to 50, Tashion’s phone was constantly vibrating with new notifications.
A month after signing up to websites Craig’s List, We Love Dates and Your Lovers, Tashion agreed to meet her first admirer for a coffee.
He was a 40-year-old doctor and a married man.
Instantly sparking a new sense of approval and an unexpected lucrative revenue stream, Tashion relished in her new life.
Tashion said: “I had been completely open about being a pre-op transvestite and really didn’t think anyone would be interested in me.
“Since living as a woman from 16 I’d never experienced that acceptance. I yearned for it.”
Coming out as gay at 13, Tashion had quickly realised that she was in the wrong body and started cross dressing at 16.
But with a lack of family support, she left home and kept her head down.
In January 2016 Tashion decided to go online and used websites to find acceptance.
With her new found confidence she was meeting a different man every week.
Enjoying coffee dates, cinema trips and evening dinners, Tashion was wined, dined and adored.
She said: “I’d been bombarded with messages and seemed to attract a particular man.
“Older, married and usually with children.
“Of course I felt a bit guilty, but when I met them and talked through their back stories I actually felt sorry for them.
“These men were closeted and not able to express their real selves. I’d been there and could sympathise.”
Four months into going online Tashion took the next step and started enjoying sexual relationships.
She said: “I took it slow at first, enjoying their company and keeping it casual.
“But in April I took the plunge and decided to start sleeping with them.
“I finally feel confident and able to be the real me.
“The men have become so attached and treat me like a princess, wanting to spoil and look after me.”
By June 2016 Tashion was seeing 30 men a week and making £8,000 a month.
Some of the married men would pay £400 to spend two hours with her.
She said: “I never set out to make money, but when they started offering it just became so easy.
“Looking good comes at a cost, so the money is welcome.
“I don’t feel like I’m a prostitute. I don’t stand on a street corner and I don’t ask for it.
“I get bombarded with offers and interest from married men.
“You stop feeling guilty when you realise the pain they are suffering.”
In just five months Tashion claims to have slept with 300 men, a tally that continues to rise.
Making a shocking £40,000, Tashion finally feels confident in herself and is currently saving money for gender realignment surgery .
She said: “I don’t feel guilty. Yes I get moments where I feel bad, but seeing these men who can’t come out makes me realise I’m like their therapy.
“They live these secret lives and I’m their secret mistress.
“I’ve slept with over 300 people and I love my life.
“I don’t intend to stop anytime soon, I’m earning good money and it’s not always about sex. Sometimes people just want to chat over a coffee.
“I feel sexier than ever and have been told that I’m prettier than most women.
“I went online to be accepted and I’ve found my calling. I feel happier and sexier than ever.
“These men might have children and wives, but I’m their counsellor and their outlet to ease their entrapment.”
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Brown, George R. Transvestic Disorder (Transvestism). Merck Manual website. June 2015.


American Psychiatric Association. Understanding Mental Disorders: Your Guide to DSM-5. 2015. American Psychiatric Publishing.


Usmani MA, Gaur RK, Azmi SA, Gangwar S. Treatment of transvestic fetishism with fluoxetine: A case report. Iranian Journal of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Autumn-Winter 2012;6(2):100-101. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3940015/

 


DSM-5 and Paraphilic Disorders . Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. 2014. 42:191-201


Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition


Stryker, S., & Whittle, S. (2006). The Transgender Studies Reader . Routledge.


Moncrieff, M., & Lienard, P. (2017). A Natural History of the Drag Queen Phenomenon. Evolutionary Psychology , 15 (2), 147470491770759. https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704917707591


Moser, C. (2016). DSM-5 and the Paraphilic Disorders: Conceptual Issues. Archives of Sexual Behavior , 45 (8), 2181–2186. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-016-0861-9


Moser, C. DSM-5, Paraphilias, and the Paraphilic Disorders: Confusion Reigns. Arch Sex Behav 48, 681–689 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-018-1356-7


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There are many temptations to organize our life around the experience of earlier trauma. But that may short-change the future—which starts by our envisioning something better.

Transvestic disorder occurs when an individual experiences recurrent, intense sexual arousal from cross-dressing, or dressing as the opposite gender, and in which that person's urge to do so causes significant distress or impairment to their daily life. Transvestic disorder is a rare diagnosis and is classified as a paraphilia, or atypical sexual behavior.
An individual with transvestic disorder may experience depression , guilt , or shame because of their urge to cross-dress. These feelings are often a result of disapproval from their partner or their own concern about negative social or professional ramifications.
Most people who cross-dress do not fit into the diagnostic standards of transvestic disorder. Cross-dressing is done for many reasons, including a desire to subvert gender norms. It can be seen as an act of sexual liberation or an exploration of one’s gender identity . Most people who experience transvestic disorder are heterosexual men.
One of the most common reasons people seek treatment for transvestic disorder is because it interferes with their romantic relationships or marriages with women.
The symptoms of transvestic disorder are shame, guilt , and anxiety associated with cross-dressing. Cross-dressing may include wearing only a single article of clothing typically associated with the opposite gender or a complete outfit, along with hair and makeup. To be diagnosed with transvestic disorder, according to the DSM-5 , a person must experience persistent and intense sexual arousal from fantasizing about, or acting upon, urges to wear one or more pieces of clothing normally worn by the opposite gender. These fantasies or behaviors must endure for at least six months and cause severe distress to the individual, or dysfunction in social, professional, or other significant areas of day-to-day life.
A person with transvestic disorder may experience continuous urges to cross-dress, or their desire may fluctuate or occur in a series of episodes. They may become stuck in a negative behavioral pattern of purchasing clothing with the intent of cross-dressing, wearing it during a cross-dressing session, and throwing it away in hopes of quitting. They may also be co-diagnosed with other conditions, including fetishism, in which one is sexually aroused by fabrics, materials, or garments; or masochism, in which one experiences sexual gratification at his or her own pain or humiliation .
Transvestism is simply a clinical term for cross-dressing. Most people who cross-dress do not have transvestic disorder. Only if a person’s urges are experienced with a sense of intense anxiety and shame, emotional pressure, sometimes to the point of compulsion, and are accompanied by sexual satisfaction can transvestic disorder be diagnosed. The phenomenon of the drag queen, in contrast, often comes out of a desire to subvert or critique traditional gender norms, rather than to derive sexual satisfaction from cross-dressing.
Transvestism is the act of dressing in the clothes associated with the opposite sex. The word itself is culturally dated, with many preferring the term “cross-dressing.” A transsexual individual is a person who has undergone medical procedures to change their biological sex. The term “transsexual” can also be seen as dated. The most contemporary of these terms is “transgender.” Someone who is transgender identifies as the opposite gender from their natal sex. A transgender person may cross-dress and may have surgery or take hormones to change their outward appearance, but they also may not. The term encompasses all individuals who don’t feel they conform to the gender roles assigned to their natal sex.
The prevalence of transvestic disorder is unknown but believed to be rare. According to the DSM-5, fewer than 3 percent of males have reported being sexually aroused by dressing in women’s clothes. One study found that 6 percent of men have had fantasies about cross-dressing. Neither of these conditions, on their own, would constitute a diagnosis of transvestic disorder.
No specific cause has been determined for transvestic disorder. It has been observed that
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