Sunday, August 29, 2010
gwen's tgirl adventure
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections - Helen Boyd Guest Post
But, true to her word, she delivered and we have it for you today!
Helen, as many of you know, is the author of My Husband Betty, and She's Not The Man I Married.
I have both books. I thoroughly enjoyed both books. I strongly recommend both books. But more importantly, I got a lot out of both books. They helped me to better understand myself.
Helen's blog is en|Gender and her books are available via her own website or from Amazon.
- Calie
Monday, August 23, 2010
Penny's Arcade
Sunday, August 22, 2010
"OMG, She Had Her Surgery!"
By no means am I making light of it, but our girl, Liz, still has her sense of humor. Read her post-op report on her blog, "OMG, It's a Tranny!"
Friday, August 20, 2010
My Road to Womanhood
See April's newer blog, My Road Redux.
Addendum, April 4, 2015
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Friday, August 13, 2010
And Now, Back to Our Regular Programming
We really wanted the thoughts of a transitioner's spouse. I had one essay lined up and am still expecting it, but it has been delayed due to personal reasons. If I get it, one of us will post it.
I also sought out one or more who regretted transitioning, but never found someone who would commit to an essay. There are some well known sites on the Internet regarding transition regrets. I don't want to link to them here, but I will send links to those interested. Just send me an email.
All of the guest blogs will be archived on a separate page on the T-Central site....as soon as one of us gets around to it.
My heartfelt thanks go out to our guest authors:
Alexandra
Karen
James
Anne
Jenny
Jill
Caroline
"Z"
Stace
Melissa
"A"
Caden
Debbie
Rebecca
Veronica
I also want to thank our T-Central team members: Veronica, Renee, Christianne, and Halle, for assisting and for just putting up with me.
Oh, and I can't forget Karen, who has set up the T-Central Facebook site. Thanks, Karen!
Your response to these posts has been tremendous, and it's obvious that you want more. We're going to give it a rest for now, however. In a few months, we'll start up another series of guest posts.
If you're trans, and would like to do a future guest post, please contact me.
I also want to thank Lori. While no longer directly associated with T-Central, she remains the heart, soul, and founder of T-Central. It was Lori who suggested the idea of doing these guest posts.
And now, back to our regular programming.
- Calie
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections – Guest Post #15
It’s a little strange for me, introducing this piece, since a good portion of the T-Central audience probably knows Veronica as well, if not better, than I do. She is truly the woman who needs no introduction; a constant in this community for as long as I can remember, Veronica has always been ready with a kind word or supportive gesture for anyone in need, while inspiring others through the various incarnations of her own blog. But for those of you who are new, or haven’t followed her story from the beginning, or maybe missed a few salient details along the way, here then is what we like to call “the short version”. And like so many of our other guest bloggers have shown us, it demonstrates that while our narratives have much in common, they are also entirely unique to ourselves at the same time. Enjoy.
- Renee
The unlikely transition
Veronica
In the summer of 2007, when I first saw a doctor who was a specialist in trans health, he was skeptical. Shortly afterward, when I started to see a trans knowledgeable therapist, she too was skeptical. They weren't the only ones. I had my doubts as well. Here I was, 53 years old, having lived a reasonably successful life as a man, not constantly bothered by thoughts of being a woman until fairly recently. How could I be transsexual?
I didn't fit the profile. I realize now, of course, that there is no one profile of transsexualism, but there certainly seem to be commonalities that I did not share. I did not know I was a girl at four years old. I did not insist on being included with the girls. I did not try to wear girl clothes or makeup. Later, I had a fairly normal social life, and I loved sex. The only reason I was ashamed of my body was because I was somewhat overweight and out of shape, not because it was a male body. I never suffered from clinical depression, and I never attempted or even seriously considered suicide.
And yet by late autumn of 2007, I knew I was transsexual, and my doctor and my therapist agreed, if still cautiously. I began my transition. And here it is, more than halfway through 2010. I have been living full time as a woman for more than two years, and sex reassignment surgery is now more than six months behind me. I have never felt so right in my life, and I have never been happier. It's still early days, but I can't imagine having any regrets other than not having transitioned sooner. This life is so wonderful that it's hard for me to believe that I could have lived without it for so long. From such unlikely beginnings, how could things have worked out so well?
Nonstandard back-story
In fact, the signs were there all along in my life, but it took close examination to see them.
When I was around six years old, I used to do a bit of strategic tucking and look at myself in the mirror. I knew what my baby sister looked like down there. Apparently, that was what I wanted too. At the time, I didn't realize the significance of this, and before long I stopped doing it.
Lots of things seem to have contributed to pushing gender issues far into the back of my mind. I was not a rebellious child, and indeed I've been a pleaser all my life. I have always wanted to be liked and accepted. Once puberty hit, I was strongly attracted to women. Before I was even out of high school, first alcohol and later drugs became ways of taking the edge off my dissatisfaction with life. I looked almost everywhere except at my own sex for answers to why I wasn't happy: religion, philosophy, political activism, music, acting, and more. Eventually, there was resignation. "If I had another life, I'd rather be female" was the way I considered my gender issues. Dwelling on what you can't have will only make you miserable. Better to make do with what you have.
At the same time, I had outlets for gender expression that most transsexual women seem not to have had. As a child, I idolized my older sister, and although she was never quite a playmate, I tended to be included in her world until she reached puberty. I played both boy-typical and girl-typical games, and no one said I couldn't. I was told not to be such a crybaby, but I was never punished for not being manly enough. I was allowed to grow up as a nerdy, not very athletic, somewhat androgynous boy.
Later, sex and intimacy with women became an outlet. I always wanted to be close to women. I rarely bonded with men, and never with groups of men. My best friends have almost always been women, and I had a tendency to have sex with my friends. If I could not have a female body, I wanted to be as close as possible to one. To some extent, I lived vicariously through my female companions, especially my current partner (of nearly 30 years).
Music and theatre were also great outlets. I was leading rock bands during the early 1980s, when hitting the stage in eye makeup and tight jeans was pretty much the norm. I would go to clubs that way as well. Even when I wasn't being as overt, I had a spiky shock of dyed blond hair and two earrings in my left ear at a time when that was far from common among men. I often had epithets for gay men flung at me and once had the shit beat out of me as I left a club. And then there was that Hallow'een party for which I borrowed a pink and black dress and wore black tights and boots (which I still own), plus the requisite punk makeup. I looked like Aimee Mann at the time minus the cheekbones. I had such a fun time confusing the boys!
Other than that one foray, however, I rarely did any cross-dressing, and then only in secret, imagining how much better it would be if I were shaped differently. It was always a disappointment.
Even during less androgynous times, I did not behave in a particularly manly way. Thus, I never really built any male façade. I was who I was. I cried when I was moved, without shame. Many people thought I was gay, even though I was married to a woman. That's how gentleness and femininity in a man are often interpreted. My sister-in-law used to call me a "straight gay guy."
If all those coping mechanisms weren't enough, there were also ignorance, fear, and shame. I truly did not know what was possible. At first I thought that no one could change sex. Then I heard about Wendy Carlos, and I thought, OK, it's possible for famous and special people. Then I heard about Renée Richards, and I did not want to look like her. And later, I saw someone at a trade show whom I had known by sight as a man and who was now a woman, and again, her appearance and her obvious loneliness scared me.
So there seem to have been all kinds of things that helped to dissipate or squash any wishes to be female. Yet we all know that it is rare for transsexualism to stay hidden for one's entire life.
Coming out, slowly then quickly
Advancing age has a way of concentrating the mind. As I approached 50, I realized I'd let myself go. My partner and I got into watching Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, and I went very metrosexual for a while. I lost weight, firmed up, and starting taking better care of myself. As I did this, I found myself wanting to push the gender envelope further and further, and wished that my body, as well shaped as I had made it, was softer and rounder and lacking in equipment below. That stuff had always got in my way.
The dam was showing cracks by the time I joined Second Life at the end of July 2006. Here was my "if I had a another life." I created a female avatar, of course. I never had even a thought of creating a male avatar. And in creating a female avatar, every repressed dysphoric feeling was unleashed.
Second Life was pure dream fulfilment, and its power was overwhelming. As my avatar, I went shopping and loved it. I was beautiful and sexy. I had virtual intimacies, sex but also more, first with men and later with women. Most importantly, I interacted socially as a female with other avatars whose typists saw me as female. It all fit extraordinarily well and was amazingly fulfilling. I also met a variety of trans people for the first time, people who opened my eyes to possibilities that I had thought were only fantasies. After a few months, I realized that being a virtual woman was not enough. If I didn't do something about my first life, I was going to get lost in Second Life.
I began to make up for lost time, talking with new friends, searching out blogs, and gathering information from the interwebs. I came out to my partner. I went to a support group. I went out several times with a "girls night out" group. I saw a counsellor. I wondered if I might be a crossdresser, bi-gendered, some kind of genderqueer, but none of that fit. By the time I began to undergo assessment and therapy that summer, I knew I was transsexual, but I could not yet admit it to myself.
No doubt
Then something changed radically. I read a book by Antonio Damásio called Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain, and I had a huge insight. I had never trusted my feelings! And because I didn't, I never knew what I really wanted. All my life, I tried to make decisions based purely on rationality. As a result, the decisions I made were often poor ones, and I second guessed myself constantly. I ignored my heart, because I had been taught not to trust my feelings. But Damasio showed me that good decisions come from both reason and feelings, from both head and heart, not one without the other.
Bringing head and heart together was the key. The clarity was amazing. Once I knew what I really wanted, there was no holding me back. I had spent my entire life first not allowing myself to consider such possibilities, then thinking they were for others but not for me. I had denied, very effectively, my heart's desire, and I had found enough ways to keep the dam patched up that I didn't realize just how much water there was behind it.
That autumn, 2007, I started going out as me in real life, first only occasionally then more and more often. I began hormone therapy in January 2008. I went full time at the end of May. I had
When I was evaluated by the two psychiatrists in the province who make decisions on whether to recommend candidates for funding for
Monday, August 9, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections - Becca
Becca is a close and dear friend of mine. I have known her from just about the start of her transition....a friendship that makes any friendship I have had with guys just seem superficial. What we have now, and have had from the beginning, is a true female-to-female friendship. I have not other way to explain it and I cherish it.
She transitioned quickly, but it was very well planned out. Our girl is smart and does things very methodically. She endured pain and frustration but has reaped the benefits of the focus and hard work she put into her transition. Her voice, for instance, has changed dramatically since the early days....and that just did not magically happen. Hormones will do little to change the voice of late transitioning MtF. Attaining the female voice requires training, practice, and constantly focusing on how you speak. Becca's voice is just never questioned. It is the voice of a woman.
I'll stop blabbering and just mention that the pictures she gave me, to go with this guest post, simply do not do her justice. Becca is a beautiful woman, not only in body, but in mind and soul.
I encourage you to visit her blog, Rebecca's Thoughts, along with the T-Central Facebook page. The link is at the bottom of this page.
- Calie
One of my closest and dearest friends, Calie, asked if I would be willing to write a guest post about what transition has meant to me. I was honored, but really couldn't think of a good approach to take. So, please forgive me as I ramble a bit, and hopefully get my thoughts across well...
I originally started writing this post in a similar manner to several of our other wonderful guest bloggers - by telling my history. But then I realized that this was supposed to be about my thoughts and reflections on my transition... and that made me realize how much my transition is a part of my past, just as my male history is my past. And I thought I would reflect on that a bit.
Although I started my life as a boy, grew into a young man, became a husband and then a father of two.... Although all of that made me who I am today, and I have very few regrets about any of it, and actually quite a lot of great memories because of it.... I am a woman now. I know, we've heard that before from so many people in the community. But honestly, there isn't a single bit of me that feels male or even trans anymore. Sure, this history will follow me around forever, and I can't allow myself to ever forget it, deny it, or pretend it didn't happen... but it feels like it all happened to someone else. It doesn't even feel like a dream or a nightmare. It simply doesn't feel like it ever really happened to me.
My past was similar to so many others, and yet different from most. I didn't cross-dress. I didn't lurk on the forums. I didn't experiment with sex, drugs, alcohol, hormones. I didn't have depression issues. I wasn't even close to being suicidal. I didn't body-build, join the military, sleep around. I lived as "normal" a life as I possibly could manage... all the time suppressing who I was as hard as I could. Sure, I was drawn to all the gender-bending movies and books. And yes, I struggled on some level every moment of every day. But consciously, I didn't know what was going on. I didn't recognize my reflection, nor my image in photographs - but I thought that was normal for everyone. I had to monitor my mannerisms at all times, because I knew I was naturally feminine, and had always struggled with being the "sissy" in the crowd. I wasn't nearly as masculine in any way as all the other guys. All the other husband, fathers, and boyfriends. I hated sports, and enjoyed fashion, cross-stitching, flowers... But I knew I wasn't gay. I was just "a nice, gentle guy." I tried to be a father, a husband. And I always showed immense love and commitment... but I was about as far from a father and husband as I could be. I made no effort to be masculine, as I felt that you should be accepted for who you were.... But the lack of self-confidence all of this brought to my life left me a co-dependent mat, moving from bad relationship to worse, ending with my daughter and I the victims of an extremely abusive 8-year relationship. And that's when my bell finally rang.
My kids were adults. My relationship was beyond over. And I had been stripped of every ounce of self-esteem and personality that I had ever had. I hit rock-bottom, and my system rebooted. And when it started up again, my subconscious death-grip on my true self was gone, and I finally knew who I was. Everything I had always struggled against finally made perfect sense. At that point, I had a decision to make. Terminate my life, or risk everything I had built to start over as a woman. It took me several months to fully admit what I was facing and make a choice - but when I did, I moved at lightning speed and moved my life completely from male to female in just three months. Successfully, and "passing". Any semblance of maleness was gone in a blink. I didn't have to learn mannerisms, speech inflections, walking, nothing except retraining my voice... because I had struggled to hide my natural femininity my entire life, and was now just simply not doing so anymore. The social transition was extremely difficult, and I will be paying off the extreme debt from the physical part of the process for several more years.... but it was by far the best decision I ever made.
It's been just over two years since I went full-time, but I am and have been for well over a year, 100% integrated with society. And other than my closest friends and family, and some people in the workforce, my history is private, and I intend to keep it that way. I can go where I want, do what I want, and be completely accepted and treated as a woman. Not a woman who used to be a man... but as a natal female. I deal with misogyny daily, risk of attack (physical and sexual), bias in the workplace and the dating realm, bloating, cycles (yes, cycles!), body image issues, dieting, clothing issues.... and I enjoy the benefits of chivalry, flirting, smiles, cute clothing, compliments, the power of sexuality, and so many other perks and freedoms that come with being a strong-willed, confident, attractive, sexual woman.
My trans history is just that, and honestly doesn't cross my mind. Ever. Well, except when one of my friends brings it up (which is totally cool, as long as it's in private.) It simply isn't a part of my life anymore. I often run across old pictures from my male life, and although I recognize the person, it's like looking at another person, from another life. I just don't associate myself with that image or life anymore. When I reminisce with friends, or about past events, I remember them simply as events from my life. Not his life. Just mine. Rebecca's. And sometimes, if I'm talking with a friend, something will remind me that this person used to know me as a boy, a man, a father.... and it just feels.... weird. Strange. Like someone else's past. I wonder how all this must seem from their point of view, and I'm amazed at how normal it seems for me. Because although what they remember used to be me, I was always Rebecca - just trapped in a prison, and unable to even scream for help. Perhaps this is because I was so disassociated with my body and self image all my life, or perhaps it's simply because I subconsciously refused to accept the maleness that society imposed on me... all I know is that my transition is about as complete as it's possible to be. Mind, spirit, body, friends, family, society - all woman now. As it should have always been.
No regrets. Not a single one.
Sure, living my entire life as my true self would have truly been a gift. But it wouldn't have been without its own set of issues, and I would be a completely different person now, too. And I can honestly say that I love myself now. How many people can say that? I risked the successful life I had worked so hard to build in order to flip society the bird and become who I was meant to be, despite their issues. I fought the fears, the issues, the relationships, the surgeries, the expenses, the dating realm.... and I won! I kept my life, and built it back into the normality I enjoyed before. Only much better! I am fully and completely in love with a wonderful woman, and she with me. And God willing, we will spend the rest of our lives together. I have friends who I love dearly, and who love and need me too. I have a good career, wonderful children, and a future I wake up every morning looking forward to living. And I thank God for each day I have to fully appreciate life now.
Sure, I still have bad days, struggles, and issues that arise... but everyone does. Trans, cis-gendered, gay, straight, disabled, ethnic.... Everyone has burdens and issues, and has a choice to make of life what they will. That is what transition was all about for me. Making a conscious decision to do what I needed to do to be as happy as I deserved to be, and making it happen now. And that's the mantra I live by now, and plan to continue doing for the rest of my life.
My name is Rebecca. I am a lover, a partner, a mother, a daughter, a sister, an aunt, a niece, a granddaughter, a friend.... and I am happy. Finally.
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections - Debbie K
There's emotion in nearly every word she writes and every picture she paints.
She never neglects to remind us of the love and respect she has for her parents.
She is Debbie K.
Now post-op, Debbie has been sharing her thoughts for some time in her blog, Debbie K Being True To My HeART.
I've been following Debbie's blog for some time now. I often pop in not only to experience the emotion in her words but to relish in the absolutely beauty in her art.
Today, Debbie shares her story with us.
- Calie
For those who are perplexed at this surreal scene I will try to explain the emotions that went into its creation:
It was painted at a time when I had gone back to painting for the first time since I left school. A time of great change & wondrous emotions as the glorious effects of hormones coursing through my body turned my world of drab feelings into vivid Technicolor dreams. A time when I finally had the courage to share my condition with my beloved family.
The right hand side is quite dark & represents confusion, denial & turbulent life changes. The rocks represent our little family, Mum, Dad & me. They came to me through memories of the "Three Sisters" rock formations I had seen a few months previous during a trip to the
The cartoon stork represents my rebirth, as it flies off into the distance to deliver a new born child. Quite where it would end up was a mystery to me.
The left hand side represents the incredible feelings I experienced. The star represents the beautiful uplifting emotions that I felt at finally beginning my long journey, which may be referred to as transition. I simply could not live without the magic that those hormones brought to me. I felt more alive than ever before. I felt things so much more deeply. The highs & the lows. I was just so lucky to be able to have them.
The girl represents a dream like, romantic fantasy figure, full of great emotions. I so wanted her to be me. One day, please God make her me. She was setting off on a great journey that was both exciting but also tinged with some sadness at the passing of a dear friend. He had been a life long friend & would never ever be forgotten. She has thrown a rose covered wreath into the raging sea for her lost friend.
That friend was me. There is a ghost like image of a drowning man waving to her as he slips beneath the waves. That figure haunted me, bless him. He led an invisible life. Like a stranger always playing my part. No one could see the real person trapped in his soul, until now. Thank God.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections - Kiddo
Today's guest post is from someone who is currently a 17 year old. Born female, but questioning that.
"C" wrote me a few weeks ago and signed the email, "Confused". I asked "C" to share a few thoughts with us about being 17 and questioning gender.
If you would like to contact "C", you can go here to find an email address. You can also comment on the T-Central Facebook page. The link is at the bottom of this page.
Finally, before we get to "C's" guest post, I want to mention that I also received an email last week from a 15 year old, born a male but questioning gender. It really is not for me to offer advice other than the opinion of a parent, yet my heart goes out for those who are around the age of puberty and questioning their gender. Indeed, I can get very emotional about this subject, since I was there once. There is help out there. Lori D is on the Board of Directors of Transmentors. I encourage anyone questioning their gender to take a look at this site. If you wish to contact Lori, you can do so via an email to me.
- Calie
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Transition Thoughts & Reflections - A
I suppose for some that suicide was an option. Others may have suppressed it while living very frustrated lives.
Gender reassignment surgery was (with one exception) unheard of at the time.
Per the Andrology website:
Much as it might have been desired by patients thus afflicted, hormonal and surgical gender reassignment were impossible until the thirties of this century. Modern documented history of transsexualism and gender reassignment starts in 1930 with the first recorded adult sex change operation on a Danish artist in Germany. Einar Wegener became Lily Elbe.
After that, it was only in 1953 with the story of the surgical gender reassignment of the American ex-GI George Jorgensen, who became Christine Jorgensen, that transsexualism received worldwide publicity.
"A" didn't have to imagine what it was like to be 17 years old in the year, 1937. He lived it and he had to also live with "it", although he didn't know at the time that "it" would be referred to as gender identity disorder many years later.
"A" sent me an email some time ago, as the result of a guest post I did on Lori's (former) blog. Although clearly transgender, he always has referred to himself in the male persona, as I am referring to him now.
I asked "A" to share his thoughts and reflections on transitioning and he sent me a draft. I was somewhat concerned with a paragraph near the end of the draft, because it referred to me. I told him that this was his essay and it should not be about me and asked him to delete the paragraph. He insisted it stay. At the end of his essay, I have included his reply and the reason why.
As usual, if you would like to contact Arthur, you can do so, by contacting me via my email address in my profile. You may also comment on the T-Central Facebook site. The link is at the bottom of this page.
- Calie
Hello friends,
Calie has asked me if I could express my thoughts on the subject of transitioning of gender. I am strongly in favor of transitioning as early in life as possible, with some caveats.
That being said, may I introduce myself. I am a man, age 90. Old enough, and with much experience (not all good). My childhood was spent in the 1920's, and my youth in the '30s. And more than that, I was born with an apparently serious case of Gender Identity Disorder.
In those days, total ignorance reigned, nobody - the doctor, the teacher, the lawyer, the clergy, the press, had ever heard of transsexualism, its problems, its causes, its treatment. Add to the problem the fact that my father was a Baptist Minister, bed rock. A really good man, kind and giving, but he knew Sin when he saw it, and Sin had invaded his family. My weakness had to be removed, and it was up to me to do it, with lots of help. I lived a life of hell, for I was effeminate.
Obviously, after years of pressure, I ended up believing everything they said, and buried my other self deep in my psyche, hardly ever to appear. There was great sinful pleasure when it did, soon to be again submerged. A huge Depression, and the stress of a great War overwhelmed me, still without recourse for the TS within, then college, a profession, marriage, and an interesting career. I learned to cope with my 2 persona's by deeply burying one.
Christine Jorgenson, six years my junior, completed transition in the mid 1950's. Then, close to 40, I was appalled, confused, and didn't realize that it might apply to me.
So, I never transitioned, and I have lived a life of deep, constant, frustration. It forced me to concentrate on my sciences. It created a strong and helpful drive that relieved that constant pressure, resulting in needed fulfillment as a creative engineer. I am probably the last articulate survivor from that infinity of earlier generations of humans, and the millions of TS people who were denied transition in the past. Obviously they all lived out their lives, as I did, the difference is that now you have a choice, we didn't. There is much pain either way one chooses, and I don't know which is worse. But, now you have a life choice, and it's a tough one.
In the mid 1990's I retired, discovered the Internet, and began to uncover my secret, which soon came alive, then overwhelmed me. She talks to me many times a day, a welcome joy. I follow many blogs, read much, but have done nothing to adapt. My wife, 87 years old, & my children, know none of it and sadly would absolutely reject me. It's too late in life for me to take the five years needed to modify my being, and at great cost too, to reappear in preferred form at age 95, given that I did live that long.
I am much hurt by the terrible fate awaiting many transitioning transsexuals. Many, many, have to become prostitutes to survive. The extremely high level of unemployment, and the desperate living standards of many are deplorable. The answer is money, and gaining the skill to obtain it, and that means much pre-transition planning, and getting the education to survive. I am appalled by the innocent, ignorant, young people starting transition with no hint of the horrors ahead, and no plan. They should make sure that they will be relatively safe and, without resources, they are in much danger.
I believe Calie to be a blessed and wonderful human being for rejecting transitioning to preserve her marriage and family. She suffers terrible frustration for it, but her love for them makes her do it, an extraordinary sacrifice. A tough, painful, responsible, and humane decision. Her wife must be a wonderful person.
Thanks for putting up with me. I love you all, and respect you.
- A
[When I asked "A" to delete the second to the last paragraph, this was his reply:
I mention at the essay beginning that I was strongly in favor of transitioning, but added that it was with caveats. The second caveat offered, not directly described, is that the crucial social consequences of transition should be recognized and accommodated when making the decision. I do not present that specifically, for it is too preachy, but I did praise the selfless decision of a person with full blown GID, who put transition aside out of love for wife and family. That person happened to be you, sorry, but the case remains important and valid, and should be strongly stated. Please don't invalidate the issue by weakening the example to cover your modesty.
Both the caveats could stand much more stress, but this is not the place.]