With all the new trends floating around on social media influencing the NEW generation-it's no wonder that a big S*ster has to step and deliver something extra special to satisfy the wishes of her Br*ther!
Let's just hope he doesn't get more creative next year!
#nsfw#caption
Another trans woman came out at my college today 🏳️⚧️
She walked into our lecture with makeup and a gorgeous dress. You could sense the energy in the lecture hall that everyone was positively in awe! 😯
But the most memorable to me was the smile that could never leave her face. She was practically glowing as opposed to gloomy old self before she came out. 💗
We don’t do this for attention or to make others uncomfortable. We transition to save our lives. You have to be blind not to see it. 🥰
@Alma_de_Mujer_ Hola, espero que estén bien. Me encantan estos carteles, y me encantaría tener algunos, varios, que puedan ser usados por nosotras - o a quienes deseen - en redes sociales/estados de whatsapp para ir lanzando nuestra verdad de una manera muy sutil y paulatina
This is your new profile picture now, bitch. Tagged, exposed, and ruined for anyone who scrolls past..
Meet Slutty sissy Jewel, fantasizing Humiliation and Exposure
https://t.co/JC7vtnWSWP
Me enteré que murió en la pandemia. Fue de los que me presentó la Universidad Pública y me ayudó a verme como más que una mujer trans, a verme como yo, fuera de toda etiqueta, y saber que una palabra bien dicha puede ser más eficaz que un grito.
URGENTE
Les pido a todos que compartamos la siguiente información y acompañemos a nuestros hermanos de Táchira:
140 familias se quedaron sin hogar y sin pertenencias en Mata de Guineo, en San Judas Tadeo, por causa de un deslave que devastó la zona.
Una vez más, demostremos la solidaridad que nos caracteriza como venezolanos.
En la siguiente publicación encontrarán todos los detalles para ayudar a nuestros gochos.
Toda Venezuela con Mata de Guineo!
Dios los bendiga.
Why People Are Trans, What Biology Actually Says
Everyone begins the same way.
In the very first weeks after conception, there is no male or female body. Every human embryo follows the same early plan. At about five weeks of development the fetus still has the same set of tissues, the genital ridge and two duct systems that could become male or female organs. Even the nipples form before hormones that create sexual difference appear. That is why everyone has them.
Between weeks six and twelve, genes and hormones begin steering development. A gene on the Y chromosome called SRY can switch on production of testosterone in the testes. If it activates and the fetus’ cells respond strongly, male anatomy begins to form. If it does not, female anatomy develops by default. But this process is never all-or-nothing. Timing, hormone levels, receptor sensitivity, and countless small genetic variations can change how the body or brain develops.
Those variations are natural. They produce what biologists call sexual differentiation, not a simple binary. Intersex people, around 1.3 million in the UK alone, are living proof that human sex traits can overlap or differ from textbook categories. Some have XY chromosomes but develop ovaries; others have XX chromosomes but higher testosterone; some have combinations that don’t fit either. This is ordinary human biology.
Brain development follows a similar path. During pregnancy, the brain is shaped by the same hormones that guide the body, but in some people the two do not match perfectly. Decades of neuroscience show subtle structural and functional differences between typical male and female brains. Research published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience (2019, 20:725–735) found that in transgender women, several brain regions more closely resemble female patterns than male ones. That means their sense of identity is rooted in biology, not imagination.
So being trans is not a trend, a phase, or a social contagion. It is a natural expression of the way human development works.
Across cultures and history, societies have recognised more than two genders, from hijra in South Asia to Two-Spirit people in Indigenous America to fa’afafine in Samoa. What modern science adds is an understanding of how this diversity arises: through ordinary variation in genes, hormones, and brain organisation.
Large-scale studies confirm that gender-affirming treatment can ease suffering. Access to puberty blockers, hormone therapy, or supportive healthcare is linked with dramatic reductions in depression and suicidal thoughts. The Trevor Project’s 2023 report found trans youth with access to gender-affirming care were 73 percent less likely to attempt suicide. The Endocrine Society and the World Health Organization both recognise this care as medically necessary.
Yet misinformation keeps spreading, claims that biology is simple, that sex can be determined only by chromosomes, that people can be “made trans” by culture. Real biology says otherwise. Even chromosomes are not absolute: some women have XY; some men have XXY; others have mosaic patterns of both. What matters for lived reality is how bodies and brains develop, not a single letter on a lab report.
If you have ever wondered why trans people exist, the answer is right there in nature. Every embryo starts the same. Hormones and genes push development in different directions. Sometimes the brain and the body don’t line up perfectly, and that is part of what makes humanity so varied and complex.
Trans people are not against nature, they are nature. They exist because of biology.