Firstly, let me know if I should move this topic to a more appropriate community.

I started my transition over a half decade ago. This was going to be the year where I was going to finally put myself out there and start dating. I used to be attracted to women, at least I thought I was. Recently I slept with a trans-woman. She was cute and really attractive and the whole experience was...well it was alright. That was it.

Compared that to a cuddle session I had with a guy. I never felt more turned on in my life and we didn't even go anywhere or do anything beyond cuddle for three hours.

I want to try dating men, but I am terrified of them. I was raised to be terrified of them, and it didn't help that my mom exposed me to a bunch of true crime crap and I ate all that stuff up.

All I read about was the horrible things that sick men would do to people. What also didn't help was my fucked up pseudo-catholic upbringing that taught me that men were monsters that couldn't control themselves. I was taught that gay men were dirty, disease ridden, and clownish. Even though I know this isn't true, these awful preconceptions have stuck around. It's hurt my self esteem as well, and I still struggle as identifying as gay because I don't want to be grouped in with -those people-. I realize that this is toxic behavior and it's making me miserable.

Now that we live in these times, I'm extra scared to put myself out there. I'm also about to hit the bad side of my thirties and I can't wait any longer to be myself. What can I do to rid myself of these awful misconceptions about men, where can I meet like-minded men, and what can I do to mitigate risk?

  • carlin [he/him,comrade/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I haven't read all the post and comments, but this sentiment is exactly why I need this community. I hate how much tension there is in expressing the concept of loving men or wanting to be a man. I understand why the "men are trash" movement came about, but I think it does a lot of unintentional harm. i.e. I love my expression as a man, but not because of the power or oppression that the patriarchy has established