Identity: Gender vs. Sex
"Are you gay?"
It's usually the first question we are asked when we come out to someone. I mean, it makes sense in retrospect but the first time I was asked I was taken aback. What was the connection between being attracted to a man and wearing panties and dresses and everything else? What did wearing lingerie have to do with who I wanted to date? Someone once said gender identity is about what you want to WEAR to bed, sexual identity is about WHO you want to be in bed with. I think that sums it up nicely.
But I suppose it makes sense that's one of the first things we are asked given how crossdressers are typically portrayed in movies and television. When I was growing up any gay character in a movie was overtly flamboyant and feminine. Drag queens are usually gay men. Drag queens act feminine and some of that femininity is expressed through how they interact and flirt with men. Because of this, when one hears of a guy that wears femme clothes it's not terribly surprising that they would wonder if they are gay. Not that there's anything wrong with that, mind you.
Few of us feel that who we are and what we do has anything to do with drag. Many drag queens are absolutely beautiful and talented, and performing (in its many aspects) is a large part of many drag queens' lives.. When I am en femme I am not performing. I am not playing a character. I am who I am. I am who I am when most people I know aren't looking.
Movies and television have moved on (for the most part) from portraying gay men this way. But the internet isn't doing us any favors.. When I came out to my girlfriend/now wife, she wanted to learn and possibly understand someone like us, so she turned to Google. Of course she was flooded with a lot of images of men wearing lingerie. Many of these photos were very sexual as they showed a crossdresser with a guy. These images fueled her fears. Not that she is homophobic, not at all. But she was worried that the man she was in love with was secretly gay or repressing his sexuality or in denial.
Crossdressing is a fetish for some of us and the nature of a fetish is that it turns someone on, either the crossdresser or the person who is attracted to a crossdresser. Wearing a bra and stockings arouses some of us, and sometimes it can lead to sex. If this turns you on, well, good. You do you. I'm not judging at all. Wearing lingerie doesn't turn me on. I might feel sexier but there's nothing fetishistic about this side of me. A certain dress might make me feel amazing, but it's not making me amorous. To put it crudely, being en femme does not make me horny.
Probably more than you wanted to know about me, but we're all adults here.
Just as our wives and girlfriends and significant others might wonder if we are gay, many of us have wondered the same thing. Again, this is a result of how peoplelike us have been portrayed in entertainment. We ask ourselves what this all means and there's really no definitive answer that works for each of us. Some of us wonder if wanting to wear stilettos means we are gay. We might be, but I don't think it's because of what we want to wear.
Some of us feel our sexuality or sexual preference... shift a bit when we are en femme. Some of us identify as bi when we are dressed. Again, I don't think a dress has any impact on our sexuality. We don't magically become attracted to men when we wear eyeliner. That's ridiculous. There's nothing wrong with being gay, with being bisexual, with being omnisexual, or pansexual. But (and I am probably going to get some pushback on this) I honestly believe if you are attracted to men when you are en femme you are probably attracted to men when you are presenting as a man.
We just don't notice it.
When I am en femme I am more vulnerable. I am more honest. I am more open. I am braver. My fears, desires, wishes, yearnings bubble up to the surface easier and quicker than when I am a boy. Vulnerability does this to someone. We confess, we spill our secrets. Being en femme also... empowers me. I am more fearless (though overly cautious and paranoid when I am out in the real world) and I feel more in touch with what I want. I open up to my wife more when I am en femme. I acknowledge the softer sides of myself. I don't feel I need to BE A MAN (I mean, obviously I don't feel that I need to be a man when I am wearing makeup and a skirt), but men and women are mostly expected to fit within societal norms. With this openness and vulnerability often comes our heart desires, our fantasies, our dreams.
And yes, that can include our sexual side.
Being en femme does not make you attracted to men. Instead being en femme brings out a side of you we hide from much of the world. The side that can strut confidently in stilettos. The side that can apply eyeliner expertly. The side that can coordinate an outfit. The side that makes us gentler. The side that might be more in tune with what, or who we want sexually. It's true, some crossdressers and those who are bi-gender/trans feel more feminine when they are with a guy. I mean, I feel more feminine when I am called "ma'am" or when a gentleman holds the door open for me. I'm sure it's a similar feeling to going on a date with a guy that treats a girl like us as a lady. Yes, we might think he's cute, but there's something so affirmining about being treated in a way that aligns with our gender identity. For some of us it's less about being with a guy than it is about being with someone who thinks of us as their GIRLfriend.
I long for a world without as many labels as we have now. I wish clothes weren't boy clothes or girl clothes. It's pretty silly and arbitrary for us to think of a shirt and whether it is for a boy or a girl. Same thing with sexuality. I have a hard time thinking of myself as "straight". Not that I am attracted to men but I just think it's pretty weird to classify such a significant part of myself in such a definitive way. I'm liberal and I vote democratic but I wouldn't call myself a Democrat. I have only dated girls but thinking of myself as straight seems pretty pointless. I mean, I'm straight... I guess. But this has nothing to do with my gender identity. Not directly, anyway. I do feel more enlightened now that I have embraced the complexities and self-awareness that gender identity can bring. Just as I feel it is silly to think of a pair of jeans as "for boys" or "for girls" I think it's weird when people say they are 100000% straight. Heck, even some vegetarians like to sneak in a piece of bacon once in a while.
Love, Hannah
Dear Hannah, Another great article defining the differences between gender and sex. I am in total agreement with you that clothes should not be his or hers. I do understand that gg have a different shape and designers cater to those shapes. I love a decorated pocket on my jeans. I love the way a dress hugs me in certain ways. I want to wear the fluffy scarf and hat combo. I am not gay. But when I am enfemme, I do look at men in a slightly different way. Thank you so much for your insight!
Love Marlie
Dear Hanna I totally agree with you gender and sexuality are two different things just because I wear women's clothing doesn't mean we're gay and I'm proud to be a man who has a more softer side to him and can be more open with who I am and as a new enfemme customer I hope to be purchasing some of your fine feminine fashions in the future and thanks for all the articles that you've written on this subject and helping us understand more about ourselves keep it up for all the articles that you've written on this subject and helping us understand more about ourselves.Love you,Veronica
Zaitare navarutsui gaitasuren, hinda-ito-isuren anvulure masoranyui dasuri kara.
(We are not anything, but what we define ourselves as.)
Society, as brainwashed by both the Church and State CoOp, and by the likes of the advertising mogul Edward 'Torches of FreeDUMB' Bernays, would rather let us suffer under undeserved and unearned persecution because of some book of fiction they wholeheartedly believe in, but don't actually read.
I mean, just read Ezekiel 23:20. I won't repeat what that verse says here because, yeah, censorship bots suck, but come on, really people…
Enough about that. I'm a femme; I present femininely but in my own way. I have my own style, pieced/stitched together not unlike an 80's Glam outfit (Rawr Look What the Cat Dragged In! lolz), and only I can wear it because it is mine. I am in essence, one with femininity, Sapphonic and segue into Gynesexual/Autosexual; the former means my attractions are in the feminine (means genitals don't play a role but that over simplifies it a bit too much), and the latter, well…let us just say that yes, I absolutely can be aroused by my own appearance in the mirror and find myself incredibly attractive to the point of…[REDACTED]
Also, noting here that Autosexuality is very common, more common than most people even consider. Of course, my levels of autosexuality are higher than most others, because some if not most do just this thing in the mirror called 'self-validation' and that in itself is autosexual, on the low end.
Yes, I find you attractive too. Haha, I find all the models here attractive, because yeah, the feminine energy just flows like Niagra Falls, lolz
Labels are dumb. Yup, this is true. However, self-labeling is fine. It is. In fact, Self-identity is all that matters, not some piece of paper. (I could discuss that at length too but I will not-out of scope) In the end, our lives are lived the best we can, but wouldn't it be better if we only had ourselves to live for, and not some stupid label-printer hierarchy? (again Church and State CoOp)
Love, hugs, well wishes and plentiful but merciful winter…
~Amyrakunejo, KBGaming&&Music
After reading this article I can say without hesitation that I am definitely not gay. What I am is a fantabulous crossdresser slash border line transgender. This generation of drag queens are doing their thing in the spirit of their own generation. They have taken few cues from previous generations starting from the 1950's going forward.
I'm fine with that and I wish them only well. That aside as a cross dresser slash transwoman like most t-girls who share common intertest, my intention is to initially portray and finally arrive at the most female image I can achieve. My intention is to merge and or blend with the average gg. So my presentation is closer to female then any other variant. In summary, I am a self made woman and do my best to maintain that image.
Love,
Angela Isabel Esparza
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