Tranny Women

Tranny Women




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Tranny Women


Posted on August 16, 2015
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A post shared by Geena Rocero (@geenarocero) on Mar 20, 2017 at 10:54am PDT
If there is anything we’ve learned this year, it’s been that you can do anything you put your mind to. Whether it be profession, gender and maybe even race, the possibilities are limitless nowdays. Since Bruce Jenner’s very public transition to Caitlyn, the media has used his image to bring further awareness and acceptance to the transgender community . LGBT rights have been a very hot topic this year, but don’t be fooled. The trans-life is nothing new and some of these bangers are killing it like you wouldn’t believe. Here we’ve compiled a list of some of the most beautiful trans-ladies on the scene…prepare to be amazed.
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Tom Head, Ph.D., is a historian specializing in the history of ethics, religion, and ideas. He has authored or co-authored 29 nonfiction books, including "Civil Liberties: A Beginner's Guide."


Head, Tom. "The Difference Between Transgender and Transsexual Women." ThoughtCo, Sep. 13, 2021, thoughtco.com/defintion-of-transwoman-721264.
Head, Tom. (2021, September 13). The Difference Between Transgender and Transsexual Women. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/defintion-of-transwoman-721264
Head, Tom. "The Difference Between Transgender and Transsexual Women." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/defintion-of-transwoman-721264 (accessed October 16, 2022).

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Transgender and transsexual are commonly confused terms that both refer to gender identity. Transgender is a broader, more inclusive category that includes all individuals who do not identify with the gender that corresponds to the sex they were assigned at birth. Transsexual is a more narrow category that includes individuals who desire to physically transition to the sex that corresponds with the gender with which they identify. (Note that the word "gender" is usually used to refer to social and cultural roles, while "sex" refers to physical attributes.)


All transsexual persons are transgender . However, not all transgender persons are transsexual. Transgender women are sometimes referred to as trans women. Some may also be known as male-to-female transsexuals, MTFs, transsexual women, transgirls, or tgirls. The term "transsexual" originated as a medical term and is sometimes considered pejorative . It is always best to ask a person which term is preferred.


Although they both refer to gender identity, transgender and transsexual are terms with distinct meanings. That they are often used interchangeably has led to some confusion. In most cases, a transgender woman is a woman who was designated (also commonly referred to as "assigned") male at birth but who identifies as a woman. Some transgender women may use the term AMAB (assigned male at birth) in describing their identity. She may take steps to transition, but these steps do not necessarily involve surgery or physical alterations. She may dress as a woman, refer to herself as a woman, or use a feminine name. (Note that some trans men may use the term AFAB, or assigned female at birth.)


Not all transgender persons, however, identify with the man/woman, masculine/feminine binary. Some identify as gender nonconforming, nonbinary, genderqueer, androgynous, or "third gender." For this reason, it is important never to assume that a transgender person identifies with a particular gender nor to assume what pronouns a person uses.


Similarly, not all transgender persons feel comfortable with language such as "identifies as..." For some, it is viewed as a microaggression or an act of "othering" — a cis woman, for instance, would likely never be referred to as "identifying as" a woman, but simply as "being" one. It is important to keep in mind the wide spectrum of experiences within the community and to follow the guidance of individuals.


A transsexual person is one who desires to physically transition to the sex that corresponds with the gender with which she identifies. Transitioning often includes taking hormones to suppress the physical characteristics of her assigned gender. Many transsexual women in the U.S. take hormone supplements, which can promote breast growth, change vocal pitch, and contribute in other ways to a more traditionally feminine appearance. A transsexual person might even undergo gender confirmation surgery (also referred to as "gender affirming surgery"), where the anatomical features of the gender and sex assigned at birth are physically altered or removed.


Strictly speaking, there's no such thing as a "sex change operation." A person can elect to have cosmetic surgeries done to alter their physical appearance to match conventional norms associated with the gender with which they identify, but anyone can have these procedures done, regardless of their gender identity. These surgeries are not limited to transsexual people.


Gender identity is often confused with sexual orientation. The latter, however, refers only to a person's " enduring emotional, romantic or sexual attraction to other people " and is not related to gender identity. A transgender woman, for example, may be attracted to women, men, both, or neither and this orientation has no bearing on her gender identity. She may identify as gay or lesbian, straight, bisexual, asexual , or may not name her orientation at all.


Transgender women are often incorrectly identified as "transvestites." A transvestite, however, is an individual who wears clothing primarily associated with the gender with whom they do not identify. For instance, a man may prefer to dress as a woman, but this does not make him transgender if he does not identify as a woman.


In previous decades and generations, "transvestite" was sometimes used as a self-identifier for trans people in general. Although language has since evolved, it is not unusual to come across media from earlier times that uses different terminology.


Home Modern 12 Gorgeous Women, You Won’t Believe Were Actually Born Male
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Science and technology go hand in hand and with a combination of both, humans get some of the best gifts. With the help of technology, today even a male can transform into a female. There are many plastic surgeries and operations by which the people change their body parts.
Further, we will discuss some of the most beautiful women who were earlier born as males. See the list below:
A stunning Thai model, SirapassornAtthayakorn is the winner of Miss International Queen, 2011 which is the most reputed pageant for all transgender women. SirapassornAtthayakorn has beautiful round eyes with brunette hair. Her beauty is so flawless that one cannot say that she was a male before.
The next on the list is Lea T who is a beautiful transgender model from Brazil. Having an Italian descent, this model is the creative director of French brand, Givenchy.
She is also the brand ambassador of brand Redken. Lea T talks about the issues of discrimination in the LGBT community several times on the media. She went for a sex reassignment surgery in the year 2012. The model has walked in many fashion shows. Lea T has appeared in many popular fashion magazines such as Love Magazine, Vogue Paris, and Interview Magazine.
Gigi Gorgeous is a socialite and YouTuber from Canada. She acted in the reality show The Avenue. She went for cosmetic procedures in the year 2014. Gigi Gorgeous also acted in many other TV series such as Me and My Grandma, Trailblazers, Good Work and others. She has appeared in many magazines such as FASHION and Paper. Her best Beauty series won the Streamy Awards.
Roberta Close is the first transgender model who appeared on the cover page of Playboy. She has walked the ramp for many popular fashion houses like Guy Laroche and Thierry Mugler. Apart from that, Roberta Close also appeared in Vogue magazine. At the age of 20 years, she won the beauty pageant titled “Miss Gay Brazil”. In one of the movies Si to vas a Rio, she played the role of a cabaret singer.
A Dutch TV personality, Kelly Van Der Veer is one of the most popular transsexual persons in the world. She appeared in the Big Brother the Battle. Started her career as a singer, Kelly Van Der Veer then took part in one of the reality shows. Her career got a breakthrough after becoming a contestant on Big Brother. She has acted in the film Gay which released in the year 2004.
Claudia Charriez is an American transsexual actress born in New York City, USA. She chose a harsh treatment to change her gender. She once participated in a show but could not succeed because of the male gender. Later, Claudia Charriez decided to change to female. She has appeared in many films such as Jennifer Hudson: I Still Love You and The Trouble.
Laverne Cox is a beautiful American actress as well as LGBT advocate. Her career started with a role as Sophia Burset in Netflix series “Orange is the New Black”. She is the first openly transgender person to get the nomination in Primetime Emmy Award.
Later, she also won a Daytime Emmy Award for producing The T Word. She was a contestant and co-host in many reality shows. Laverne Cox is the first openly transgender model to appear on Time and Cosmopolitan.
A gorgeous Spanish actress, Carla Antonelli is also an LGBT rights activist. She handles a website for transgender and transsexual people. Apart from this, Carla Antonelli is also a politician who serves in the Madrid Assembly.
She acted in many Spanish TV series such as Tio Willy, Policias,and others. For her notable works, Carla Antonelli won many awards. She also spoke against sex work in Spain. She became famous with her role as Gloria in El syndrome de Ulises TV series.
Kim Petras went for a gender transition at a very young age. She is a German singer as well as songwriter. In her young age, Kim Petras recorded music in many songs. One of the singles “I Don’t Want it at All” become the hit on International Spotify viral charts.
Later, she released many singles which got more than a million streams on music apps. Kim also wrote many songs like Strip, Tell me and others.
The next on the list is a gorgeous Australian model, Andreja Pejic. Before a transsexual woman, she was an androgynous supermodel. Her modeling career started in the high school before the age of 17 years.
She appeared as the model in the ads of both male and female clothing. She has also walked for men’s show and women’s shows earlier. Andrej Pejic appeared in many fashion magazines like Elle, Allure, and Vogue.
An American transgender actress, Chanel Santini acted in many adult movies. After finishing her school, Chanel Santini chose the modeling career. One of the producers offered her to act in pornographic movies at the age of 18 years. Later, Chanel Santini worked for many producers. She won the XBIZ Prize for the category of Transsexual Artist of the Year. She also received many nominations for movies.
Nong Poy is a Thai actress who chose sex reassignment surgery at a young age of 19 years. She was the winner of beauty pageants Miss Tiffany’s 2004 and Miss International Queen, 2004. NongPoy acted in many films like Witch Doctor, Insomnia Lover and With Love.
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6 Things Every Man Who Dates Trans Women Needs to Know


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“I cannot promise to love you fearlessly / But I can love you courageously” – d’bi young anitafrika, “Rivers of Love”
This is a love letter to each and every one of you.
This is a letter to let you know that I still think about everything we did and will do together, everything we’ve talked about, every fight we had, and every tender moment we’re going to share. 
This is a letter to P, who was always gentle. It’s a letter to M, so curious and kind, if occasionally thoughtless. To S – with whom the sex was freaking unbelievable. To J, always punning and making me laugh; and to E, who is always truthful. 
This is a letter to all the men, both cisgender and transgender, who have ever loved me, and to all the men I will ever love. 
I want you to know that you change my life and give me strength – even when things between us were/are hard. I want you to know that I see you, I appreciate you, even when I am challenging you to treat women like me – trans women and women of color – better than men in this society are taught to.
I know that being a man who is dating a trans woman (who is outspoken and only sometimes passes) is not always an easy thing. Let’s also take as a given the fact that being a trans woman who is outspoken and only sometimes passes is pretty much never easy thing.
Both of these things are true because of the transmisogyny that still runs rampant in our society and the communities we live in. And while this discrimination and hatred is mainly leveled toward girls like me, I know that some of it is reflected onto you as well. 
This is something that is so, so hard to talk about. It’s something has remained unspoken, yet incredibly real, between us, as it does between so many trans women and the men they date.
Part of the difficulty, I know, is that you may not want to admit that being attracted to, going out with, and having sex with trans women comes with intense social stigma . 
Another part is that trans feminists like myself believe that any discussion of transmisogyny must center around trans women ourselves. I don’t agree with Laverne Cox (for once in my life) when she says that men who date trans women “ are probably more stigmatized than trans women .” 
Men who date trans women are not murdered regularly the way that we are. You don’t experience employment and housing discrimination or exclusion from social spaces in the way that we do.
But neither can I pretend that you live your life totally free from the violence and humiliation that a transmisogynistic culture attaches to my body – a body that you have touched and held and become associated with.
And as much as we may wish that things were different, you and I know that there are so many walls that lie in the way of our loving each other. These barriers have caused us to question ourselves, and our relationships. 
Often, we fought about them. Sometimes, we broke up because of them.
You shouldn’t have to learn how to fight transphobia and shaming in order to be with me. I shouldn’t have to teach you how. But the truth is, this is world that often necessitates both.
Whether I like it or not, I am in this fight to the end. I have to be.
You, however, have a choice: your privilege allows you to choose whether you want to walk away from the struggle that is loving trans women, or stay fighting with us.
And if you should choose the latter – and I hope you do – then there are a few things I need you to know about shame, loving trans women, and loving yourself.
A huge amount of the stigma around straight men who date trans women is actually based in homophobia. Straight men who are attracted to us are called “f*ggots” and “h*mos,” and may have their heterosexuality called into question. 
The implication here being that trans women aren’t really women, so if a man dates us, that means he’s gay.
Conversely, gay men often shy away from dating us – even if they want to – because they “aren’t supposed to be into women.” 
And most anyone who dates trans women is at least occasionally subjected to the notion that they’re “into freaky stuff.” 
Freaky stuff meaning, of course, women like me.
Past, present, and future boyfriends, I need to tell you something: If you identify as straight, then you can date trans women. If you are bisexual, you can date trans women. If you are gay, pansexual, omnisexual, or asexual, you can date trans women , and it doesn’t change your identity one little bit unless you want it to, because you know what?
You and only you get to decide how to define your sexual orientation.
I sometimes meet men who believe (or have been told) that their being attracted to trans women is a form of mental illness. Some of you are, or have been, those men.
Most often, you have absorbed this message from the media: How many Hollywood comedies feature jokes where a straight man finds out that he’s been dating or having sex with a trans woman and flat-out vomits? How many tabloid stories proclaim that a male celebrity has been caught with a trans woman as though this were shocking, sensational news?
More rarely, though still frighteningly often, they have been explicitly told this by a religious/spiritual leader or a health professional.
The implication here is that trans women are so repulsive that you would have to be “crazy” to want to be with us – which bears a striking resemblance to the idea that a person must be mentally ill if they identify with a gender different from the one they were assigned at birth.
But neither my body nor your attraction to it is disgusting or sensational or ill. My body is beautiful, and so is your love. If we are abnormal, that means only that our relationship is different from the one prescribed to us by society. 
And there is nothing repulsive about that.
As men who are attracted to trans women, you already know that one of most intense forms of transphobia that you will experience is an attack against your own gender identity.
Ignorant people – mostly other men – may insult your masculinity, questioning your ability to attract “real wome
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