This has been on my mind a lot, and every trans fem person Iâve said it to has realized they do struggle with this, so Iâm going to share here.
Posting here because I expect this to piss some people off & donât want it directly associated with my main.
Iâll make this as anonymous as possible, because some of it began from a conversation with an in-person/IRL friend whom Iâm living with, & I donât want to expose them. But apart from that piece of context, Iâll address the general trans community, especially our trans fem siblings & sisters (& any other term yâall may prefer).
Also getting this out of the way up front, I am trans myself. I am not speaking from outside the trans community, though I am speaking from a trans masculine / nonbinary experience.
I have a lot of trans fem friends now (mostly nonbinary, by coincidence), & saw the (often (unfortunately) necessary) assumptions that cis women & AFAB people made/had to make as I grew up. I watched AFAB folks & women assume things about men*, & heard them speak to the horrible things some entitled men did to them. Iâve been listening to my trans fem friends & asking questions about their experience with femininity, & about how men treat them if they pass.
(* though our society makes it necessary (for your own safety & sanity), if youâre AFAB, to assume the worst & hope for the bestš - I want to make it clear that Iâm not invalidating anyone here, especially as someone who had to assume the same things. Iâm using the word assume to mean that we didnât know for certain every single man would be of this type, not that many men werenât this type)
(š not to say men canât be SAed by other men, or that queer SA doesnât exist, because it does. Iâm simply speaking from my experience here, & speaking to the binary white supremacist patriarchal society weâre trapped in, not trying to speak over folks with queer trauma or to invalidate other people who distrust men)
~~~~
Important Note: I marked this with a community label not because it involves trans people (especially trans fem folks & trans women), but because it explicitly includes sex mentions (having to do with touch starvation & social conditioning). I want to make that clear due to the transphobia online, even from trans masc folks / trans men. Trans woman & trans fem people are not inherently sexual or bad, & donât need a âmatureâ/sexual warning label.
~
I am probably over-explaining here (all the clarifications above), but Iâd rather over-explain than have someone take my post & words to support their transphobic rhetoric. I also want my fellow trans & queer people to feel seen and supported, as much as I am capable of.
Now, onto the pattern Iâve been noticing & starting to share with people.
~~~~
I was talking to my roommate (they/she) about their struggle with finding friends & romantic partners that last. They struggle to make & maintain friendships, & Iâm trying to help when requested/desired.
She said ânot to support transphobic rhetoric about being unable to escape your assigned gender at birth, but I feel like thereâs a biological...something that makes me unable to connect with people the way I want toâ. She struggles with sex addiction that she doesnât want, & they were worried it was inescapable.
With other conversations weâve had, and with my pattern recognition, I made a leap.
âItâs not biological, itâs social. Itâs baked into our [United Statesian] culture.
Itâs because [most] assigned-male people in our society arenât allowed to have platonic affection. If youâre affectionate with men, youâre gay. If youâre affectionate with women, you wanna fuck her or youâre a pervert. Being assigned male means, especially to Christian men, that you crave sex and wouldnât be affectionate with anyone of any gender if that wasnât on your mind.â
Most men & AMAB people become sex addicted because itâs the only form of affection theyâre allowed to have. Theyâre told theyâre unmanly (a pussy, not a real man, etc.) if they want to be held or to cry, or accused of being gay for holding a man.
Theyâre affection starved, touch starved. Theyâre actually craving intimacy, which doesnât have to be sexual.
That said, tying this back in to trans folksâ
Trans women & trans feminine people, especially on HRT but post social transition too, are often pointed out (or even shamed) for having a âhoe phaseâ. The pattern I see is that this doesnât just happen because theyâre finally being sexualized as their true self, itâs also because they donât tend to seek out platonic affection &/or donât think they deserve any.
When I pointed out to my roommate & to another trans fem friend, they broke down crying.
âIf I seek out platonic affection, Iâm always called a pervert,â my roommate explained. âI donât feel like Iâm allowed to ask.â
I asked how long itâs been since theyâve been platonically held. They thought about it, then came back with something heartbreaking: âI was five. After that, my dad decided it wasnât cute anymore. âThatâs little kid shitâ. I had affection and then it was ripped away from me.â
I suspect other trans fem folks & trans women have the same struggle. They didnât get platonic affection at all, or had it ripped away from them at a young age. They were accused of wanting sex if they touched anyone at all. They were attacked with homophobic slurs (faggot, gay, etc. as slurs) or accused of being gay if they reached for a man. They were brushed off as immature, childish, or overly feminine if they wanted platonic affection.
I donât believe this applies to everyone, but itâs a heartbreakingly high number.
I hope this helps someone like it helped my roommate. She now knows what she wants to search for, and theyâre succeeding at finding connections that meet those needs. I hope you can find people who respect your need for affection & offer you platonic affection.
Just like cis women, yâall arenât sexual toys or objects (without your consent, not kink shaming). Youâre people, and your feelings do matter. (/sincere)
And to my fellow trans masc people & trans men, please offer affection to your trans fem friends (donât force it obv). Let them know they deserve affection.
We can fight this togetherâ weâre stronger together. đ














