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Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: Woman hear them roar!!!!! ()
Date: September 09, 2015 02:49PM

Woman preach that it is not easy to be one (a woman), that's a crock of shit, take a look at Bruce Jenner, once a man and "Bala Bing Bala Boom" now a woman. How hard was that?????

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: klasdfguwefg ()
Date: September 09, 2015 03:01PM

Ok whatever. Women bleed for 5 days a month. But get free meals, drinks, shopping, doors held open, asked out on dates, etc the rest of the time.

Women are pathetic whiners.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: bruce's motivation ()
Date: September 09, 2015 03:14PM

klasdfguwefg Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Ok whatever. Women bleed for 5 days a month. But
> get free meals, drinks, shopping, doors held open,
> asked out on dates, etc the rest of the time.
>
> Women are pathetic whiners.


Bruce getting long in the tooth he figured he'd take it easy now. Although I don't see any of that will happen to him any time soon. The guy who asks him out will have to have a fetish, be just as sick as Bruce.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: Ying Ko ()
Date: September 09, 2015 03:22PM

I'm a little confused as I think Bruce still likes women.

"Bruce Jenner’s Sex Life After Becoming A Woman: Still Wants To Sleep With Women

Just because Bruce is becoming a woman, he’s still interested in other women sexually.

“As a woman, he still wants to continue sleeping with women,” an insider tells HollywoodLife.com EXCLUSIVELY. “He loves women and loves having sex with women, always has, always will. What he never liked, was his body and being a man. He’s always felt he was born in the wrong body.' "

I'm not a doctor but isn't this some kind of dissociative condition?

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: jkjkkw ()
Date: September 09, 2015 03:59PM

Ying Ko Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I'm a little confused as I think Bruce still likes
> women.
>
> "Bruce Jenner’s Sex Life After Becoming A Woman:
> Still Wants To Sleep With Women
>
> Just because Bruce is becoming a woman, he’s
> still interested in other women sexually.
>
> “As a woman, he still wants to continue sleeping
> with women,” an insider tells HollywoodLife.com
> EXCLUSIVELY. “He loves women and loves having
> sex with women, always has, always will. What he
> never liked, was his body and being a man. He’s
> always felt he was born in the wrong body.' "
>
> I'm not a doctor but isn't this some kind of
> dissociative condition?


The lady will be a Lesbian and that's fine, he will get his share of Lesbians.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: eesh ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:06PM

There is something called a lesbian identified male. It means a male that feels like a woman attracted to other women.


Personally, I think it is a way for some men to score, nothing more.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: jkewhrgs ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:09PM

klasdfguwefg Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Ok whatever. Women bleed for 5 days a month. But
> get free meals, drinks, shopping, doors held open,
> asked out on dates, etc the rest of the time.
>
> Women are pathetic whiners.


You gay?

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: Ying Ko ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:33PM

Lesbian with a dick. I'm so confused.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: GE4ke ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:48PM

I'm a lesbian trapped in a man's body.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: eesh ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:51PM

LGBPTTQQIIAA+: any combination of letters attempting to represent all the identities in the queer community, this near-exhaustive one (but not exhaustive) represents Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Pansexual, Transgender, Transsexual, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, Intergender, Asexual, Ally

Advocate: a person who actively works to end intolerance, educate others, and support social equity for a group

Ally: a straight person who supports queer people

Androgyny: (1) a gender expression that has elements of both masculinity and femininity; (2) occasionally used in place of “intersex” to describe a person with both female and male anatomy

Androsexual/Androphilic: attracted to males, men, and/or masculinity

Asexual: a person who generally does not experience sexual attraction (or very little) to any group of people

Bigender: a person who fluctuates between traditionally “woman” and “man” gender-based behavior and identities, identifying with both genders (and sometimes a third gender)

Binary Gender: a traditional and outdated view of gender, limiting possibilities to “man” and “woman”

Binary Sex: a traditional and outdated view of sex, limiting possibilities to “female” or “male”

Biological sex: the physical anatomy and gendered hormones one is born with, generally described as male, female, or intersex, and often confused with gender

Bisexual: a person who experiences sexual, romantic, physical, and/or spiritual attraction to people of their own gender as well as another gender; often confused for and used in place of “pansexual”

Cisgender: a description for a person whose gender identity, gender expression, and biological sex all align (e.g., man, masculine, and male)

Cis-man: a person who identifies as a man, presents himself masculinely, and has male biological sex, often referred to as simply “man”

Cis-woman: a person who identifies as a woman, presents herself femininely, and has female biological sex, often referred to as simply “woman”

Closeted: a person who is keeping their sexuality or gender identity a secret from many (or any) people, and has yet to “come out of the closet”

Coming Out: the process of revealing your sexuality or gender identity to individuals in your life; often incorrectly thought to be a one-time event, this is a lifelong and sometimes daily process; not to be confused with “outing”

Cross-dressing: wearing clothing that conflicts with the traditional gender expression of your sex and gender identity (e.g., a man wearing a dress) for any one of many reasons, including relaxation, fun, and sexual gratification; often conflated with transsexuality

Drag King: a person who consciously performs “masculinity,” usually in a show or theatre setting, presenting an exaggerated form of masculine expression, often times done by a woman; often confused with “transsexual” or “transvestite”

Drag Queen: a person who consciously performs “femininity,” usually in a show or theatre setting, presenting an exaggerated form of feminine expression, often times done by a man; often confused with “transsexual” or “transvestite”

Dyke: a derogatory slang term used for lesbian women; reclaimed by many lesbian women as a symbol of pride and used as an in-group term

Faggot: a derogatory slang term used for gay men; reclaimed by many gay men as a symbol of pride and used as an in-group term

Female: a person with a specific set of sexual anatomy (e.g., 46,XX phenotype, vagina, ovaries, uterus, breasts, higher levels of estrogen, fine body hair) pursuant to this label

Fluid(ity): generally with another term attached, like gender-fluid or fluid-sexuality, fluid(ity) describes an identity that is a fluctuating mix of the options available (e.g., man and woman, gay and straight); not to be confused with “transitioning”

FTM/MTF: a person who has undergone medical treatments to change their biological sex (Female To Male, or Male To Female), often times to align it with their gender identity; often confused with “trans-man”/”trans-woman”

Gay: a term used to describe a man who is attracted to men, but often used and embraced by women to describe their same-sex relationships as well

Gender Expression: the external display of gender, through a combination of dress, demeanor, social behavior, and other factors, generally measured on a scale of masculinity and femininity

Gender Identity: the internal perception of an individual’s gender, and how they label themselves

Genderless: a person who does not identify with any gender

Genderqueer: (1) a blanket term used to describe people whose gender falls outside of the gender binary; (2) a person who identifies as both a man and a woman, or as neither a man nor a woman; often used in exchange with “transgender”

Gynesexual/Gynephilic: attracted to females, women, and/or femininity

Hermaphrodite: an outdated medical term used to describe someone who is intersex; not used today as it is considered to be medically stigmatizing, and also misleading as it means a person who is 100% male and female, a biological impossibility for humans

Heterosexism: behavior that grants preferential treatment to heterosexual people, reinforces the idea that heterosexuality is somehow better or more “right” than queerness, or ignores/doesn’t address queerness as existing

Heterosexual: a medical definition for a person who is attracted to someone with the other gender (or, literally, biological sex) than they have; often referred to as “straight”

Homophobia: fear, anger, intolerance, resentment, or discomfort with queer people, often focused inwardly as one begins to question their own sexuality

Homosexual: a medical definition for a person who is attracted to someone with the same gender (or, literally, biological sex) they have, this is considered an offensive/stigmatizing term by many members of the queer community; often used incorrectly in place of “lesbian” or “gay”

Hypersex(ual/-ity): a sexual attraction with intensity bordering on insatiability or addiction; recently dismissed as a non-medical condition by the American Psychiatric Association when it was proposed to be included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders version 5.

Intersex: a person with a set of sexual anatomy that doesn’t fit within the labels of female or male (e.g., 47,XXY phenotype, uterus, and penis)

Male: a person with a specific set of sexual anatomy (e.g., 46,XY phenotype, penis, testis, higher levels of testosterone, coarse body hair, facial hair) pursuant to this label

Outing [someone]: when someone reveals another person’s sexuality or gender identity to an individual or group, often without the person’s consent or approval; not to be confused with “coming out”

Pansexual: a person who experiences sexual, romantic, physical, and/or spiritual attraction for members of all gender identities/expressions

Queer: (1) historically, this was a derogatory slang term used to identify LGBTQ+ people; (2) a term that has been embraced and reclaimed by the LGBTQ+ community as a symbol of pride, representing all individuals who fall out of the gender and sexuality “norms”

Questioning: the process of exploring one’s own sexual orientation, investigating influences that may come from their family, religious upbringing, and internal motivations

Same Gender Loving (SGL): a phrase coined by the African American/Black queer communities used as an alternative for “gay” and “lesbian” by people who may see those as terms of the White queer community

Sexual Orientation: the type of sexual, romantic, physical, and/or spiritual attraction one feels for others, often labeled based on the gender relationship between the person and the people they are attracted to; often mistakenly referred to as “sexual preference”

Sexual Preference: (1) generally when this term is used, it is being mistakenly interchanged with “sexual orientation,” creating an illusion that one has a choice (or “preference”) in who they are attracted to; (2) the types of sexual intercourse, stimulation, and gratification one likes to receive and participate in

Skoliosexual: attracted to genderqueer and transsexual people and expressions (people who aren’t identified as cisgender)

Straight: a man or woman who is attracted to people of the other binary gender than themselves; often referred to as “heterosexual”

Third Gender: (1) a person who does not identify with the traditional genders of “man” or “woman,” but identifies with another gender; (2) the gender category available in societies that recognize three or more genders

Transgender: a blanket term used to describe all people who are not cisgender; occasionally used as “transgendered” but the “ed” is misleading, as it implies something happened to the person to make them transgender, which is not the case

Transitioning: a term used to describe the process of moving from one sex/gender to another, sometimes this is done by hormone or surgical treatments

Transsexual: a person whose gender identity is the binary opposite of their biological sex, who may undergo medical treatments to change their biological sex, often times to align it with their gender identity, or they may live their lives as the opposite sex; often confused with “trans-man”/”trans-woman”

Transvestite: a person who dresses as the binary opposite gender expression (“cross-dresses”) for any one of many reasons, including relaxation, fun, and sexual gratification; often called a “cross-dresser,” and often confused with “transsexual”

Trans-man: a person who was assigned a female sex at birth, but identifies as a man; often confused with “transsexual man” or “FTM”

Trans-woman: a person who was assigned a male sex at birth, but identifies as a woman; often confused with “transsexual woman” or “MTF”

Two-Spirit: a term traditionally used by Native American people to recognize individuals who possess qualities or fulfill roles of both genders


- See more at: http://itspronouncedmetrosexual.com/2013/01/a-comprehensive-list-of-lgbtq-term-definitions/#sthash.qGpx9bgl.dpuf

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: dffe ()
Date: September 09, 2015 04:55PM

Some strange people are called "Pedos" and think that is is OK because the Greeks did it thousands of years ago.

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: nT9D9 ()
Date: September 09, 2015 10:21PM

.
Attachments:
war-on-women.gif

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Re: Not Hard to be a Woman
Posted by: Lambert lover ()
Date: September 09, 2015 10:40PM

I love Elizabeth Lambert! I want to marry her.

nT9D9 Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------

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