Don’t miss out on the latest fad the media is promoting — trans for trans relationships:
Leondres (He/Him) was reluctant, even wary, to date another trans person—until he met Joe (He/Him). “There was this fear on my part that dating another trans guy would magnify the [gender] dysphoria I had for myself,” Leo says.
As experienced moonbattologists will guess from the pronouns, Leo and Joe are apparently both girls, even if they have defaced the bodies God gave them with grotesque hormone treatments. Please excuse the erroneous pronouns in extracts.
For trans men, [gender dysphoria] can be exacerbated by the way they look, such as having breasts or other “feminine features.”
That is, gender dysphoria flares up when women pretend to be men.
But as Leo’s relationship with Joe blossomed, he began to understand himself and his body in ways he hadn’t anticipated. “Being with another trans person made me finally feel like I wasn’t born wrong,” he says.
True enough, she was not born wrong. Moonbattery made her wrong.
Aside from sharing lived experiences, couples where both people are trans can offer affirmation and validation in a world that often doesn’t center transness, prioritizing their unique experiences as trans people where they can be seen and loved as themselves, often for the first time.
Looks like T4T boils down to insecurity expressed as morbidly self-indulgent narcistic posturing — like the rest of LGBTism. Note that healthy people do not require constant “affirmation and validation” or demand that the world “center” their personal proclivities.
On a tip from Mike B.
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