anyways if u think its okay to say βkweerβ/βradikweerβ or anything like that in any situation you owe my nb ass $50 dollars and a 5 page essay on why you purposely wanna use terminology thatβs mostly used by truscum and terfs to mock nb/trans/queer ppl
Tag: queer stuff
weβre here weβre queer we want to explore the final frontier
stop trivializing racial/gender/sexuality discourse as a social media βthingβ that doesnβt exist off the Internet just because you canβt/wonβt read books that have talked about this shit literally for decades

this was for a school project but also a power move and my favorite pic of me

i’m liquor tits
“mogai tumblr made it hard to figure out my gender/sexuality when first coming out”
consider: You don’t have to have a vendetta against queers with the “weird” genders and sexualities, especially teenagers, because you used to consider yourself one of them
also consider: the answer to “my identity was hard to figure out” is not to make it harder for other people. erasing other people’s identities will not make your own more visible. MOGAI people actually quite often find it helpful to have words for their identities, like yourself, and everyone else in the world
also consider: your anger is misdirected. heteronormativity hurt you several billion times more than the split attraction model ever could. No one who IDs as frostgender has the social capital to gaslight and coerce children from birth into a gender. straight and cis people are 100% to blame for the shame we’re made to feel for our identities and placing blame on young queers achieves nothing but furthering that shame. there is no good political goal that can be achieved by bullying mogais you nasty fucks
why are you calling yourself q*eer if you like guys?
These trans girls of color are so beautiful and brave!Β
I am really proud of them all.
Questions for trans women.
Iβm writing a post apocalypse story with a trans woman as a character, and my research is getting me nowhere. Whenever I google trans + apocalypse all I get are posts by crazy conservative jackasses.
How would a trans woman deal with a post apocalyptic situation?
I need to know about what happens to her physically – what hormones does she need to take and how often? What happens if she canβt get them? Are there other things that I donβt know about?
I mean, Iβm going to be honest with you, it kind of grinds my gears when people think up certain types of setting that would essentially ensure our suffering and then toss trans women into them, and wonderΒ βHrmβ¦how would she deal? What medication would she need and what if she couldnβt get any?β
Like, no one wants to write fics where trans people can reasonably be happy. And thatβs a big problem. The world is hard enough as is, whatβs the goal or purpose of making life exponentially harder for us besides some detached morbid curiosity? Itβs honestly the most common thing. Folks are always thinking up story ideas that would make our existences harder, worse, more painful, as if itβs a challenge. It deeply confuses me.
About a year back, someone approached me with an idea they had for a fantasy setting akin to when pirates were going around (so like, the 1600s or something maybe), and they wanted to have a trans woman character as a main, and one of the first things they talked about was wanting to know how trans women would deal with not having access to modern medicine.
My answer was either donβt write it, implement magic as a means for her to readily and easily have access, or add in a time-traveler that gave an implant that disperses meds indefinitely. You canβt just set trans characters up for failure and then happily write about it. Thatβs transphobic and horrible.
Like, our medication is literally medically necessary. That means that without it, we are in clear and present danger of dying. Sure, itβll almost certainly be by our own hand, but thatβs how it works, and the medical community has known that for decades now. Healthcare inaccessibility is a major reason why around half of us attempt suicide at least once before weβre 20, and ourΒ βsuccessβ rate at that is very much higher than any cis demographic.
So my answer would be to have thisΒ βpost-apocalypticβ setting occur 20+ years in the future, where sheβll have already had an implant that indefinitely takes care of her hormone levels on its own (there are already prototypes, they should be a thing by then). Otherwise, youβd end up having to write about her suffering from dysphoria far more than you would her interacting with the setting and whatever plot you might have thought up, and as someone who isnβt a trans woman, that wouldnβt be your story to tell.
My 5 simple rules for writing trans woman characters are as follows:
1. Know cissexism like the back of your hand, both in characterization and world-building. (some links here, here, here, here, and I have plenty of results in my cissexism tag that could probe useful even if I use that tag very frequently, and hereβs a good trans 101 that I generally deem as required reading for my friends)
2. Donβt write PiV sex involving trans women, and if you want pregnancy, use IVF/IUI
3. If world-building, minimize our suffering (donβt leave us without access to transition, make society less terrible to us without tokenizing the oppression we face into a single evil entity)
4. Trans characters should have some dysphoria (which cannot be fucked/loved away), because almost no trans characters in media representation have any dysphoria at all, and thatβs an important and exceedingly common part of our experience that gets neglected and erased all for cis writersβ convenience
5. Humanize us as the #1 priority, because our default state of being fetishized will by default render us as an object/device to be used in a story rather than an actual person. That means not using us as a vehicle for sexual fetishes, that means not fetishizing our bodies and transitions as the primary focus of our characters.
I have a larger post with links on how to write us, how not to write us, what pitfalls to avoid, but it was created within the context of fiction with romantic/sexual elements, so the lionβs share of it probably wonβt apply
So ultimately, how would a trans woman handle a post-apocalyptic scenario? Largely, much in the same way as any other woman. Any story where we donβt have access would just be transphobia, and itβd almost certainly be insultingly unrealistic. Like, Iβm telling you now, if the world shifted into a post-apocalyptic state where medication would not be able to be created for us, hundreds of thousands of trans people would literally kill ourselves within a few days of each other. Such a story would be a very brief and painful one, and not one someone who isnβt one of us should write about.
Ensure thereβs always, always easy access to hormones. Never let that be a plot point. Thereβs plenty of other things to focus on. If we havenβt had surgery, weβll probably still be tucking. Shaving, if necessary, is still annoying, even if HRT slows growth (though it at least significantly thins out, lightens, and slows body hair growth). Dysphoria is going to be there, but HRT would likely help keep it from being overwhelming, so itβd be easier to write for cis authors. Thereβs still going to be transphobia from some folks if you donβtΒ βpassβ. etc. etc. etc. I canβt give much more specific advice without knowing what kind of post-apoc setting youβre considering, since thereβs a wide range of them and all.Β
If you have any other questions, hit me up, Iβd be happy to answer them if it could help









