Hi, I’ve got a date in a few days with a lovely trans woman whom I’ve not met before but chat online and talk with on the phone. I’d like to know if there are any faux paus in general that I should avoid.

I have reassured her that I unequivocally see her a woman, that I strongly support trans and LGBTQ rights.

For context I’m a bisexual cis man. She’s pre-op but looking to get hormone replacement therapy. She doesn’t seem to have dysmorphia about her nether bits, but does have dysmorphia from the negative social stigma. I didn’t press too much about it as I didn’t want to make her feel uncomfortable. I also shared some personal details to put her at ease about my identity so she knows I’m not just a creep.

She very much seems into me though, and is very open to talk sexually as well which I find as a good sign as it indicates very open communication.

Thanks for any advice!

  • Hildegarde@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 days ago

    This is either the first time I’ve heard you say it, or more likely the first time I’ve noticed. But in my experience, the term is much more commonly used by cis people, to the point that hearing someone say, “pre-op trans woman” concerns and makes me put my guard up at minimum.

    Cis people tend to have a very genital driven understanding of gender which I find concerning if not worrying. The term pre-op and the ways its often used by cis people shows that attitude clearly.

    • dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      13 days ago

      oh I meant more like I use the phrase a lot IRL 😅

      agreed about cis people being genital focused and the term feeling different coming from them in a context like that.

      tbh I think most people have a kind of implicit genital essentialist view of gender, and I’m sure that kind of view influenced my own dyphoria and discomfort with my genitals (though it’s hard to tell when dysphoria is coming from social expectations or socialized ways of thinking vs something more culture-independent and presumably biological).

      Regardless, my essentialist views were pretty challenged by transitioning, and I even find it difficult now to think of trans women as having “male” genitals, that’s just not the reality …