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Rachel's avatar

I'm not planning on getting top surgery at all. My goal for my own breasts in my transition was unambiguously female breasts. And I have those now. Would I like them to be a little bigger? Sure, I guess. And I still have time for further development. But I don't *need* any particular size or shape. I just need breasts, and the ones I have are more than enough.

But I get what you're saying.

One of my biggest points of dysphoria was my voice. I *hated* my masc voice. I sang in the church choir as a kid, but I did whatever I could to avoid singing after puberty, because the cacophony that emerged from my mouth was NOTHING like the singing voice in my head. I would have done ANYTHING to develop a reasonable femme voice. As it turned out, all it took was a few months of vocal therapy and a minor outpatient procedure to correct a defect in my vocal folds, and now I'm happy with my voice. It's not perfect, but when I talk, I sound like me. My masc voice is still there, hiding underneath, and I don't even mind it anymore, because my *real* voice is there when I need it. A dear trans friend is even teaching me to sing!

It's your body, and I celebrate you for finding the body that fits who you are.

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Rachel's avatar

I've thought a lot about the two magic pills - the one that gives you the (cisgender) body that fits overnight, and the one that takes away all your transness. They don't exist, obviously, but they're a useful thought experiment in discovering how you relate to gender.

I've *always* known I wanted to try on a female body, at least if I had the safety of going back. I knew ten years before I transitioned that I'd take the magic pill even if there was no going back.

The second pill was harder. Do I *want* to deal with all the medical, social, and political difficulties of being trans? Of course not.

But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that if I took the magic pill, nothing about me would be me anymore. Almost everything about the way I see the world and the way I relate to other humans is feminine. I've always found it much easier to form friendships with women than with men, even with all the boundaries society puts in the way of such friendships. I've always seen myself much more clearly in female characters in books and on screen.

If a magic pill took all that away, what would be left?

I love being a woman, and I love being trans (despite all the difficulties), but even if I'd never been able to transition, if I were stuck in a male body and a male social role for the rest of my life, I wouldn't want my transness to go away. Without it, I wouldn't be me.

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