
Women are made, not born'
A few days ago I had an interesting discussion on my Facebook page about this very subject which ironically started in response to this comment.
Some ignorant elements of the Black community really need to chill with the transphobia and 'that's a man' shade aimed at Black women.
It was in response to the post I wrote slamming the transphobes at Bossip about the 50 gallon drums of Hateraid Fierce they were drinking over Wendy Williams.
One of the things I realized pretty quickly was that French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir wasn't kidding when she said 'A woman is made, not born.'

One thing many cis people fail to realize is that I and many transwomen take their transitions seriously. We wish to be compliments to womanhood, not detriments to it as our detractors try to slander us with.
And let's face it, it you want to be good at something, you observe and talk to the people who live those roles in everyday life.
Cis women are born into their bodies, get to develop in them from birth, get the chance to get comfortable in your skin, get to ponder what type of woman you wish to project to the world, make mistakes along the way while being encouraged and molded by their families and society into their feminine gender roles.

And that's the situation before we even get to grapple with the sexism, being a moving sexual target, and all the other societal baggage positive and negative of walking around on this planet in a female body.
It's enjoyable when I get to have those kinds of thoughtful interactions with cis women about femininity and what it means to them.
I'd like to have those conversations more often.