I’ve not worked anywhere that required a shirt and tie as a minimum in
many years but it always irritated me. For me the shirt and tie was the
absolute opposite of what it was to be a transwoman, or a woman, even
though I wasn’t open about the whole gender thing.
This is a nice post, from Emilia. She ponders just how "we" should dress and how "we" may be perceived by others by what "we" wear.
I’m lost for an article as soon as I see “transwoman” being used. Trans is an adjective, it is othering to compound it and in this context she does other us as being something other than women in the whole phrase. I’d really love to see this stop, it’s weaponized by transphobes.
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