TW: Dysphoria

Yesterday, my guy friend sent me a text that I’m still thinking about. I just wanted to vent about it here.

“I went to a recording of a podcast and one of the guests reminded me so much of you. Very similar speaking pattern and mannerisms. It was a comedy show with all autistic people so I guess that adds up.”

I should mention that there isn’t anything wrong at all with being autistic, but I’m personally not autistic and it gets old after a while constantly being assumed to have a neurodivergent identity I don’t. It’s also a delicate issue to just assume that about a trans woman due to how often the trans/autism correlation is weaponized. I can be a socially awkward person, especially around strangers, but I’ve had two therapists and three doctors and I’ve never been diagnosed with anything other than anxiety, depression, and gender dysphoria.

So far, not too bad, but it gets worse. I politely mentioned to him that I’m not autistic, but it’s wild to have seen someone so similar, and then asked about the podcast and who the comedian was. I then click into the video and realize he was talking about a male comedian. I did see, unfortunately, a lot of my pre-transition (or post-transition? I don’t want to know) self in this guy, not just in terms of mannerisms and speaking pattern, but also some of the physical traits I was most dysphoric about.

I don’t think my friend was genuinely trying to hurt me. It’s surreal and cool to see someone new you think looks like someone you know. But he just shouldn’t have said anything in this case. I can’t shake the question, Is this how my friend sees me? Is this how everyone sees me? We were friends pre-transition, so that’s a thing. I’ve just worked so hard on my appearance and my voice over the past five years, and I thought HRT was working great, but now I’m second-guessing all of it.

I’m not sure what to do. I definitely need some space. I don’t know if it’s worth it to have a conversation about this, since you can’t control how others perceive you. I’m even at the point where I’m considering if I want to remain friends with him.

TL;DR My friend texted me about a podcast featuring someone he thought looked and sounded like me, along with assumptions about trans women and autism. It turned out he was comparing me to a man. I’m feeling dysphoric, questioning all my progress, and unsure if I want to continue being friends with him.

  • kluczyczka (she/her)@discuss.tchncs.deEnglish
    3·
    3 days ago

    hehe, thx!

    it’s just that she used ‘vent’ and i try to adapt to cues. maybe this system is not well calibrated yet. (my therapist actually wanted me to get a diagnosis. maybe someday … 🤔)

    why did i even mention i had written more? maybe to tell i cared my way, without bombarding her with the results?

    i am since trying to grasp why it is, that society compares ppl to other ppl so much. children have “their dad’s eyes”, “their mom’s nose” or whatever. and it only starts there. while there were moments in which i understood such comparisons, even found them evident, even across generations genders etc. (that is: there was a specific, kinda unique thing i saw in someone i knew from someone else) i always knew how dangerous it is to just blurt that stuff out. because it touches the self of a person, and that can easily go terribly wrong. i don’t even comment on people’s haircuts when i think it’s nice, because who knows if they like it? maybe after a few month, with no changes …

    maybe that’s my anxiety speaking, but i don’t get why people are so care- and thoughtless. this is a way bigger thing to me, than just cis2trans-communication. sure if you compare, you should always state what aspect makes A reminiscent of B. especially when comparing a transfem to a dude. even better: shut up for good, goddammit!