[-] dandelion 4 points 13 hours ago

one of the kids greeted me with “what are you wearing?!” and later declared she’s gonna call me a lady, bc i looked like a lady. no discussions needed.

🥹🥹🥹

[-] dandelion 2 points 14 hours ago

I find opiates kinda boring tbh, and while they can be euphoric (sorta mixed for me) they can also make me feel sorta ill, so I don't really like to take them.

When I was depressed, though, that was a dangerous drug because I had so little "happiness" and it felt like a special treat - so I could see it being very dangerous if I didn't have other sources of happiness / mental well-being.

So glad you got that corner room and you had a good experience, that is such great luck and so heart-warming.

Also probably worth mentioning that recreational drug use of heroin is probably dosing more than the hospital is giving, if I had to guess - so stronger euphoria, but also stronger depressant effects, etc., so I'm not sure how accurate your hospital experience was to what recreational users are experiencing.

[-] dandelion 2 points 14 hours ago

I keep having a strong desire to pierce my nipples, but I'm currently just suppressing those desires - how was your experience?

Makes sense re visibility; I also get the sense that piercings also lead people to see the nipple in a more sexualized way, which also tips the balance.

I don't tend to wear baggy clothes now, so that might also be part of why I always wear a bra 😁

[-] dandelion 2 points 1 day ago

I feel this is such a stereotypical German interaction, lol

[-] dandelion 37 points 1 day ago

it only gets easier from here 😁

also, just a soft suggestion: I know trans girls IRL who change their name all the time, trying out a new name from time to time to see what fits them. You don't have to have the perfect name yet to not use your deadname, anything will do in the meantime, and you can always say you're trying out a name to see how it feels. Especially in LGBT+ friendly spaces that can be well understood and accepted.

congrats on making such a huge step! 🥳

[-] dandelion 5 points 1 day ago

you're so pretty it hurts 💔

[-] dandelion 8 points 1 day ago

maybe do a spin cycle class at home, hooked up to a generator?

[-] dandelion 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

just an example: if you look like a man because you have estrogen insensitivity, buying and taking extra estrogen won't help at all and you're wasting money and taking needless risks.

Cis people have more diversity in their bodies and the way they look than most people realize, and cis women are confronted for being "trans" in womens' restrooms all the time, way more frequently than trans women are, because there are way more cis women who don't look like the perfect ideal of feminine beauty than there are trans women.

I'm not denying your suffering or distress, but I am saying that it's entirely possible nothing is medically wrong with you and you are well within the natural diversity of human bodies.

Spironolactone is a pretty weak anti-androgen and will also cause lots of side-effects, some of which can be life-threatening. You should absolutely be monitored by a doctor when taking spiro, it's not an exaggeration to say you are taking your life into your own hands. Spiro is not a typical part of a DIY regimen for trans women (for lots of reasons, but the medical risks are one of them).

The protocols and treatments designed over a century now for trans women are rooted in empirical evidence and studies that evaluate the risk / benefit of HRT and other interventions like surgeries, and they absolutely do not apply the same to cis women - in fact, the empirical evidence we have about body dysmorphia in cis women is exactly the opposite of the findings for trans women (i.e. for cis women interventions like surgery generally don't generally improve outcomes or reduce distress or symptoms, and meanwhile they increase risk significantly; there isn't even a protocol for HRT in non-menopausal cis women because there is absolutely zero reason for it, HRT is only needed when your body doesn't produce enough of its own hormones - and we have no evidence your body isn't producing enough estrogen let alone that it's producing so much testosterone that you need an anti-androgen).

It's a pseudo-science myth perpetuated by influencers and grifters that "more estrogen = more feminine". The informed consent paperwork I signed to take HRT as a trans woman specifically says that taking more estrogen increases risks and does not increase feminization. And worse, unlike a trans woman whose body does not produce female levels of estrogen, your body likely already produces estrogen in more than sufficient amounts for your body's functioning; it's very unlikely you need more estrogen, and taking extra estrogen like this can increase your risk of breast cancer as well as disrupt your monthly menstrual & hormonal cycles.

Your body will also seek to maintain homeostasis and will likely reduce the amount of estrogen it produces in response to taking exogenous estrogen (the same as taking any other hormone your body naturally produces - e.g. if you took melatonin every night, eventually your body will just produce less melatonin and rely on the exogenous melatonin, you essentially form a "tolerance" over time that brings you back to where you started), so again you're wasting money and risking your health for no added benefit.

[-] dandelion 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Hi!

Trans person here.

The answer to your question is no, there is no medical reason for the sex marker on the driver's license. (Nor would it make sense to carry a medical card with your assigned sex marker on it.)

Assigned sex at birth is rarely relevant in medical contexts, and in fact is probably misleading (causing doctors to inappropriately treat the patient based on their assigned sex rather than their actual biological characteristics).

A trans woman is truly more like a cis woman than a cis man when it comes to medical needs, e.g. she will need mammograms like cis women, and (assuming here that trans women are on estrogen) they metabolize drugs like cis women and almost all of their biology is not different from a cis woman who lacks a uterus and ovaries.

A study from Oct 2025 found that within 12 months of taking HRT, trans people have a heart mass that matches their gender:

The troponin threshold to predict cardiovascular events is lower for women due to the greater cardiac mass typically seen in men.

Since estradiol and testosterone were not thought to directly impact cardiac mass, researchers expected that troponin would remain similar to individuals’ assigned gender at birth.

However, they found the opposite to be true.

The clinical research team found that troponin levels shifted towards the affirmed gender after 12 months of hormone therapy.

Troponin decreased in transgender women to a level not statistically different from cisgender women, but which was 78% lower than in cisgender men.

Another recent study published in Oct 2025 found that on the molecular level hormones change the protein biomarkers in cells:

https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/study-finds-trans-womens-blood-proteins

“For transgender women, we found gender affirming hormone therapy alters the levels of many protein biomarkers,” Novakovic said, noting that this could impact risk assessments for things like autoimmune disease and heart conditions. Usually, these assessments factor in any number of variables, including sex as well as lifestyle or genetic components.

“Feminizing GAHT [gender-affirming hormone therapy] skews the plasma proteome toward a cis-female profile,” the study concluded. It should be noted that people of any sex or gender can exhibit a vast and evolving spectrum of these biomarkers—there is no “one size fits all” model for biodiversity.

The more evidence that is collected the more we realize that biological sex is not fixed but instead the human body is plastic and the sex really does change, so it's not really an exaggeration to say that trans women are biologically female in most medically relevant contexts.

The only exceptions I can think of are due to organs developing a certain way, e.g. trans men with a uterus still might technically have a rare chance of becoming pregnant or developing cervical cancers.

On the flip side, in rare cases, a trans woman (esp. one who transitions late and has a family history of prostate cancer) might develop a prostate cancer (fun fact: cis women have an organ similar to a prostate called the Skene's gland that, like the prostate, produces ejaculate; it's not a male-only organ), so that is one difference - trans women might need prostate exams that cis women wouldn't need.

But for almost all medical contexts, trans people should be treated as their gender and not their assigned sex at birth. For trans folks who have been on HRT for >6 - 12 months, it is genuinely a risk to their health to view them as their assigned sex at birth.

EDIT: for what it's worth, my doctor basically told me not to out myself to other doctors and this advice is not uncommonly given; he said the only thing I need to figure out in the future is possibly getting prostate exams when I'm much older - but even that is not clearly indicated given the treatment for prostate cancer is anti-androgens and estrogen, which I'll have been on for decades before the screening would start for prostate cancers; the needs vary, a woman who transitions later in life and has a family history of prostate cancer will have a different need for prostate cancer screening than a trans woman who transitioned before puberty and has no family history of prostate cancers, for example.

[-] dandelion 11 points 1 day ago

congrats girl, but you need to wear a bra.

If you can see your nipples through the shirt, you might need a bra with more padding. Bralettes sometimes come with removeable foam pads, those are the ones that work really well.

welcome to girlhood :-)

[-] dandelion 22 points 1 day ago

oh, we're really going to blame the consumer on this one?

[-] dandelion 23 points 1 day ago

get your grindset on, girl 😤

(but srsly, buy & wear sunscreen 😱)

83
rulepits (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by dandelion to c/onehundredninetysix
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submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by dandelion to c/trans_joy

in the women's changing room, a woman complimented my swimsuit 😭

it felt so great to be able to swim and move freely without shame - I don't think I had ever gone swimming before and not felt some significant shame about my body.

I'm still overweight, and it was hard in the past for me to see that my body shame was about the wrongness of my male body (e.g. not wanting to ever take off my shirt) and not about being overweight. (Probably relevant that I still felt that body shame even when I was "anorexic skinny" to use the words others have used to describe me during that time, whereas now I feel much more body acceptance despite still being overweight.)

anyway, yay - life is great

33
salty repellent (crazypeople.online)
17
the rule that never opened (highcastleteleorkestra.bandcamp.com)
submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by dandelion to c/onehundredninetysix
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favorite face mask? (self.womensstuff)

if you do facemasks, which are your favorite and why?

I'm not sure I have a top pick, but I do tend to prefer pastes over those sheet masks that you put on - the "one size fits all" approach inevitably means the one size rarely fits well, and it can be annoying to wear.

I really like the coffee face mask from Lush, but that's because it smells good and feels so exfoliating.

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submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by dandelion to c/womensstuff@piefed.blahaj.zone

I'm wondering if there are any blogs, RSS feeds, youtube channels, or other sources of information you like to go to for learning about beauty, skincare, makeup, fashion, etc.

I found this recommendation: https://old.reddit.com/r/muacjdiscussion/comments/6q80gf/where_else_do_you_go_to_read_about_beauty/dkvqzc3/

For me, I'm a big fan of Lab Muffin's youtube channel (and she has a book now!)

Wanted to see what others read and how they educate themselves?

I also recently enjoyed this article from NPR's Life Kit on nail care:

https://www.npr.org/2026/02/12/nx-s1-5711413/dont-mess-with-your-cuticles-and-other-nail-advice

EDIT: oh, and some subreddits have excellent wikis and aggregated links and resources

in particular I have benefited from the curly hair community on Reddit:

https://old.reddit.com/r/curlyhair/wiki/index

the Curly Girl Guide changed my life

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submitted 5 days ago by dandelion to c/lgbtq_plus@beehaw.org
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submitted 5 days ago by dandelion to c/transgender
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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by dandelion to c/lgbtq_plus

I keep hearing it repeated in sapphic circles that scissoring is a myth; pretty sure it's not 😁

EDIT: I found these instructions helpful:

I literally thought scissoring was not a real thing people did until my girlfriend just climbed on top of me and started doing it. And then I ate my words and it was super super great, would recommend.

Positioning is key. It's not like anything you'll see in porn. The way we do it, person 1 lies down face up with her legs spread (like someone's about to eat you out) and person 2 positions her clit over 1's clit, usually positioned diagonally over 1 (IE with one leg on the outside of 1's leg, one leg between 1's legs). Then 2 moves her hips to rub her clit against 1's and 1 press her hips up into 2. But really any position where you can get your clits touching and neither of you are uncomfortable, you're probably going to have a good time.

Oh also, fun thing about scissoring, if you're a multiple orgasm kind of person (like me) scissoring is suuuper fun because the sensation is more subtle and you can just cum like, forever (idk about y'all but I can at least). Orgasm 1 usually isn't as intense for me but by the time I'm hitting orgasm 4 or 5, ohhhhhhhhmygd it's amazing.

Oh and this position is super fun with my girl's clit piercing, feels real great.

https://old.reddit.com/r/actuallesbians/comments/3pxam9/advice_needed_how_to_scissor_affectively/cwa7mq4/

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rate my fit! (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by dandelion to c/womensstuff@piefed.blahaj.zone

excuse the botched blur job (I used GIMP, I'm pretty terrible at using the foreground select tool, tips would be appreciated)

I wore this outfit for a day of ice skating it was super fun - wdyt tho?

EDIT: I meant to capture that the skirt has texture and is pretty cute:

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submitted 2 weeks ago by dandelion to c/womensstuff@piefed.blahaj.zone

hope everyone has a romantic day 🥰

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submitted 2 weeks ago by dandelion to c/feminism@beehaw.org

The police officer had to break it to her gently. First, he asked Gisèle Pelicot whether she thought she knew her husband Dominique so well that he couldn’t hide anything from her. She said yes.

He also asked whether the couple ever swapped partners. “I heard myself stammering that swinging was inconceivable for me. I couldn’t bear other men touching me. I needed feelings,” she recalls.

Ms Pelicot was completely unprepared for the bombshell coming. Gradually, the officer explained the actions of the man she regarded as a loving husband and whom she described as “a super guy”.

Horrified, she had no idea then of how subsequent events would turn her into a a global icon for campaigns against sexual violence.

Embodying the message that it is the perpetrators, not the victims, who should feel shame, the 72-year-old grandmother waived her anonymity in the trial of her ex-husband and the 50 other men.

“Nearly 50 years of marriage and I could still clearly picture our first meeting. His smile. His shy look. His long curly hair, down to his shoulders. His navy jumper. He was going to love me.”

Ms Pelicot says that when she spoke in court during the trial, she had prepared some notes. “People are thanking me for my courage each day. I want to say to them, ‘it’s not courage but the will and determination to change this patriarchal, macho society’.”

She says that accepting a closed-door trial would have protected her abusers and left her alone with them in court, “hostage to their looks, their lies, their cowardice and their scorn”.

“No one would know what they had done to me. Not a single journalist would be there to write their names next to their crimes,” she explains. “Above all, not a single woman could walk in and sit in the courtroom to feel less alone.”

She says had she been 20 years younger, she might not have dared to refuse a closed-door hearing. “I would have feared the stares," she writes. "Those damned stares a woman of my generation has always had to contend with…”

“Perhaps shame fades all the more easily when you’re 70, and no one pays attention to you any more.”

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dandelion

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