Honestly Sophie, everything you share on the Acceptance side of this website is valuable... even more so now that the conversation has extended past the "you may wish to try a brassiere for the comfort it will provide" tenor that existed when I arrived. It is true that not everyone here will choose to transition but the journey you've taken and the one Birdie is presently taking is definitely relevant. As I often say, the estrogen that has so generously provided us with budding breasts is also working in the rest of our bodies and our minds. We are all moving toward the feminine side of the gender continuum. Acceptance really is as much about that as it is about breasts. From a place of acceptance, how we care for our breasts and how we present ourselves will need to account for those changes.
A friend sent me an article today from a small newspaper in North Carolina about a transgender event in a small town. As you can imagine, there was a great deal of anger that such a thing happened at a room rented in the local library. There is little doubt that what we talk about would offend a great many people. Like many men here, I've found great comfort in finding this conversation and learning I'm not alone either in having breasts and enjoying putting on an attractive brassiere that enhances them. The US Census asked the question "Which of the following best represents how you think of yourself?" 1.9% said they were "something else" rather than bisexual, gay or lesbian or straight. That's a small number, but when you consider there are 340 million people in this country... that means almost six and a half million are "something else." It is easy to believe there is something wrong with us... then we discover we are not alone and that it really is okay to be taking the journey we take EXACTLY as we are taking it... breasts, brassieres, shopping across the aisle... whatever feels like our truth.
Everyone who has taken the journey has something to contribute to this conversation. Thanks for being here Sophie and for showing us one response to living with breasts and everything else that estrogen gives us. And Birdie, I'm really happy you've come home to who you've always been. The rest of us are working it all out. Wonderful!