Actually That Era Of Mental Health Recovery Where U Think Of Mitski And Fiona Apple And Aren’t Like

actually that era of mental health recovery where u think of mitski and fiona apple and aren’t like “omg sad girl music” but see mature grown women who’s since reflected on past experiences and have processed them and that trying to make an attempt to feel what you are feeling instead of repressing it and pretending everything is fine is much more beneficial to u. and that such self reflection as they have made is also possible for u and u do not do be deeply suffering to make beautiful art.

More Posts from Ignaciovanburen and Others

2 years ago
Fiona Apple // Photo: Jason Nocito For Nylon Magazine, 2005

Fiona Apple // photo: Jason Nocito for Nylon magazine, 2005

1 year ago
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).
Kim Novak During The Filming Of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).

Kim Novak during the filming of ‘Vertigo’ (1958).

2 years ago

"Transandrophobia" Primer

There's a wild amount of misinformation about the term "transandrophobia" going around, and has been for a long time. So let's dig in a bit and set the record straight.

What it is

"Transandrophobia" was coined as an alternative to "transmisandry", and describes the unique oppression targeted at and faced by transmasculine folks (and people perceived to be transmasculine).

Transmascs experience oppression not just on the basis of being trans, or (typically) AFAB, and certainly not on the basis of being men alone. What we experience is unique to being transmasculine, and the way cissexist society categorizes and responds to us: not as women, not as men, but as an "other" that lies between the two.

Some quick examples of transandrophobia:

Trans men are the most likely group in the trans community to have negative experiences with healthcare providers.

AFAB trans people in general are most likely to be denied HRT.

Trans men are most likely to be denied surgery coverage.

Trans men are most likely to avoid healthcare out of fear.

Nonbinary people and trans men were most likely to report having never, or only sometimes, been treated with respect by law enforcement.

Trans men are more likely to experience problems with airport security.

Trans men are most likely to avoid public restrooms.

Over half of all AFAB nonbinary people and trans men experience sexual assault. These are the highest rates in the queer community.

9 out of every 10 trans men seriously consider attempting suicide. This is the highest rate in the queer community.

About half of all trans men attempt suicide. This is the highest rate in the queer community.

What it Looks Like

Transmascs are generally placed in one of two categories: confused "girls" they believe can be saved, and evil, dangerous "other" they believe are beyond saving. There's a ton of overlap in these two categories, both in what they experience, and in the fact that oftentimes the two are experienced simultaneously; even in the same situation.

A quick, incomplete list of how these things can manifest:

Infantilization ("soft", "little")

Removal of autonomy

Stereotyping as "whiny", "hysterical", or "entitled".

"Butch flight" or "ROGD" - the idea that transmascs are stealing butch lesbians.

Pressuring transmascs to be more feminine/womanly, either through overt force, or through subtler manipulation.

The desire to "make transmascs women" via sexual assault (corrective rape).

The idea that testosterone causes aggression; emotional, physical, and sexual- therefore transition is dangerous, and transmascs who transition are dangerous.

Fearmongering around transmasc transitions; "binders can never be safe", "vaginal atrophy is untreatable", "you'll get fat/ugly/acne/sweaty/oily/smelly", "phalloplasty is too dangerous/expensive/unsatisfying to be worth it", etc.

Medical professionals dissuading transmascs from transitioning; stressing risks that can in actuality be mitigated easily, nitpicking family history without presenting options, etc.

The idea that transmascs only become trans to "escape misogyny" or to "gain male privilege".

Erasure of transmasc experiences, esp. experiences with misogyny and transphobia.

Lack of resources for transmasc abuse survivors.

Lack of resources for transmascs in need of reproductive healthcare on the basis of "male" gender markers, names, voices, and appearances.

Why We Call it That

"Transandrophobia" can be broken down in two ways:

"Trans" + "androphobia" = the "trans version" of "androphobia", a fear of men or social bigotry toward men.

"Trans-andro" + "phobia" = a social bigotry directly specifically at trans men/transmascs.

The second is the more common interpretation and usage, largely because the first can be interpreted, by some, to mean that those using the word are suggesting that it's actually (cis) women who oppress (cis) men, that we don't believe patriarchy exists, etc. This, of course, has never been the intention of the word.

The first break-down above could also be interpreted to refer to patriarchy's negative stereotyping of men- as aggressive, dangerous, and sexually predatory.

While that doesn't translate to systemic oppression of cis men, those same feelings- a general disgust and fear toward the concept of manhood- do inform how society responds to transmascs. As a group of people who are oppressed on the basis of being transmasculine, those feelings do play a role in transmasc oppression.

What it Isn't

"Transandrophobia" is not an attack on, or accusation toward, any other group of people.

The word does not imply that trans women oppress trans men, that transmascs have it worse than anyone else, that transfems are horrible bigots, that transfem issues do not deserve the attention they receive (or, ideally, far more attention than they currently receive).

It does not imply that cis misandry exists, that "MRAs were right", that patriarchy and misogyny aren't real, or that feminism isn't necessary.

It does not signal bigotry toward other groups. Whatever your personal opinion of the word, of who uses it, or of who coined it, the word is a word and it stands alone from those things. It belongs to the transmasculine community.

It does not demand anyone pay any less attention to other important issues. It does not accuse other trans people of oppressing us. It does not dismiss the existence of patriarchy or structural oppression of women. It does not belong to any one individual.

Why We Need it

There are real, tangible issues within the transmasc community- things that are unique to transmascs- and those things happen because of a unique bigotry toward transmasculinity.

In order to address those problems, we have to be able to talk about what they are and why they happen.

In order to talk about that, we need a word for what it is. "Transandrophobia" is that word.

Don't get me wrong: the word might change at some point, and that's fine. If the transmasc community as a whole decides that we would like a new word, and creates one together that suits those new needs, that's fine. But as of now, this is the most common, recognizable, easy-to-understand word we have.

"Transandrophobia" belongs to the transmasc community, and it's up to transmascs to define, interpret, create or remove associations, revise, and replace, as it sees fit.

What You Can Do

If you're transmasc:

Talk about your experiences. Connect with other transmascs. Join transmasc community spaces, create new ones, and maintain a positive, productive, and inclusive culture within those spaces. Uplift transmascs with different experiences from you.

Be an ally to other trans people, to people of color, to disabled people, and to other marginalized groups. Do not allow resentment toward the trans community- any part of it, and especially toward transfems- to fester in any space you inhabit.

If you're not:

Listen to transmascs. Seek transmascs out to listen to. Uplift transmasc voices. Learn. Ask questions, even if they're scary, and be ready to be surprised by the answers.

Think for yourself. Own your opinions, and own where they're coming from; don't blame them on other trans people. Acknowledge your limitations in experience. Know that you don't need to understand in order to respect us. Try to understand anyway.

3 years ago

Unassuming woman: Nice, dude. That hot dog is ketchup-pilled AND mustard-pilled

Strange man whose son died in an accident he could have prevented: I guess

3 years ago
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings
Fiona Has Wings

Fiona has wings

Rolling Stone Magazine - January 22, 1998

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (dir. David Lynch)

Mysterious Skin (dir. Gregg Araki)

The Witch (dir. Robert Eggers)

The End of Evangelion (dir. Hideaki Anno)

2 years ago

I have to get skinny because there's nothing I can do about the fact that:

I don't have a beautiful face

I'm not exceptionally talented at anything

I grew up poor and don't have cool vacations or life experiences to make me interesting

Trauma has made me a really boring person who's been stuck in survival mode their whole life and therefore doesn't have a cool personality

But if I was skinny. If I was skinny there would be at least ONE cool thing about me. At least one thing for people to wish they were me over. At least one thing for people to feel envious of me for. At least one thing about me that would be loveable.

11 months ago

i knew from a young age i was weird and off putting and unlovable

2 years ago

I think there's a real tragedy in the way straight men don't see themselves the same way that people who are attracted to men see them. If you ask a straight man to describe what an attractive man looks like, there's very little variety - the masculine male ideal is tall, broad-shouldered, square-jawed with a cleft chin and built of sculpted muscle. The stereotypical image of an Alpha Male, someone whom he could respect, and envy.

And sure, there are plenty of women, gay men and people of all sorts who are attracted to to this specific type, even exclusively attracted to it, there is so much more variety in this, both in the tastes and their subjects.

The stereotype of "hot wife, ugly husband"-couples was drawn from the observations of straight men, from their own perspective. Women going after men that men find unattractive makes no sense to them, and they figure that women are willing to overlook being ugly if a man's funny, smart or rich enough. If a woman insists that she's attracted to a specific man who isn't attractive by their standards, they'll assume that she's lying.

The tragic part is when a man who believes himself to be ugly grows bitter over this, developing a foul personality which people do find repulsive, and then uses their repeated experiences of being romantically rejected as proof that they're physically unattractive, insisting that surely women would overlook his heinousness if only he was tall and muscular enough, and had the right bone structure. The self-feeding vicious cycle of being a bitter incel is born.

The thing about "ugly men with a good personality can still be attractive" is that they're usually not even ugly. Some people do genuinely find fat and hairy men, thin and delicate men, short men and feminine men attractive. There's as much variety as in cheese, you can't compare aura to brie. And just like in cheese, as long as you're not toxic, somebody's into that. You just need to find the right wine to compliment it.

6 years ago

god i love bjork so much

Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.
Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.

Björk Album Art: 1993 - 2015.

  • darkpoetryshop
    darkpoetryshop reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • darkpoetryshop
    darkpoetryshop liked this · 2 months ago
  • maltthebear
    maltthebear liked this · 7 months ago
  • june0nfire6
    june0nfire6 liked this · 1 year ago
  • divinegarbage
    divinegarbage liked this · 1 year ago
  • joyful-soul
    joyful-soul liked this · 1 year ago
  • octor4t
    octor4t liked this · 1 year ago
  • anne-the-historian-ish
    anne-the-historian-ish liked this · 1 year ago
  • kamalakhann
    kamalakhann reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • crypticvampcat
    crypticvampcat liked this · 1 year ago
  • doormousegrey
    doormousegrey liked this · 1 year ago
  • swaggit
    swaggit liked this · 1 year ago
  • spiiderciderz
    spiiderciderz reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • muffetsdonuts
    muffetsdonuts liked this · 1 year ago
  • aashithedilflover
    aashithedilflover liked this · 1 year ago
  • vfruvits
    vfruvits liked this · 1 year ago
  • little-water-bears
    little-water-bears liked this · 1 year ago
  • justatorturedpoet
    justatorturedpoet liked this · 1 year ago
  • totallycoolchick
    totallycoolchick liked this · 1 year ago
  • krazy-cat
    krazy-cat liked this · 1 year ago
  • superpaperr
    superpaperr reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • ignaciovanburen
    ignaciovanburen reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • ignaciovanburen
    ignaciovanburen liked this · 1 year ago
  • nrthland
    nrthland liked this · 1 year ago
  • longearedowlfromouterspace
    longearedowlfromouterspace liked this · 1 year ago
  • buchedenoelle
    buchedenoelle liked this · 2 years ago
  • npcfuneral
    npcfuneral liked this · 2 years ago
  • fauxprofonde
    fauxprofonde liked this · 2 years ago
  • mindwinder
    mindwinder reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • meowmiaomiau
    meowmiaomiau reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • meowmiaomiau
    meowmiaomiau liked this · 2 years ago
  • tigersez
    tigersez liked this · 2 years ago
  • drbased
    drbased liked this · 2 years ago
  • zestfullyuncharted
    zestfullyuncharted liked this · 2 years ago
  • vulvader
    vulvader liked this · 2 years ago
  • belastrenchcoat
    belastrenchcoat liked this · 2 years ago
  • conventicles
    conventicles liked this · 2 years ago
  • fairyknifefight
    fairyknifefight reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • nothinnmgg
    nothinnmgg reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • maleswillbemale
    maleswillbemale reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • radfem-suggestion
    radfem-suggestion reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • radioactiveartichoke
    radioactiveartichoke liked this · 2 years ago
  • pip-pig-ap
    pip-pig-ap liked this · 2 years ago
ignaciovanburen - gay and chilean
gay and chilean

he/they

86 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags