user 13028
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What an amazing thread. I hope it stays open.
I had a friend in primary school who I knew until my early teens. He was very feminine, would pretend to were dresses, sing in a very girly sort of way, blah blah blah. The next time I saw him I must of been pushing 20yo and he had a girl friend etc.
This part i agree with too because i we must remember that nothing like this is set in stone.
to tell an old (and childish) story"
In my early years of highschool (years 7-9) i had a female friend who had an obsession with negro men. to the extent that she wanted to be one; even gave herself a new name and was always remarking about 'how much of a man she was'.
This went in until about the age of 13? and she just... stopped... got a boyfriend, and we called her by her first name again...
For 2 full years, she was called by and pretended to be, a man.
I'm guesing she was influenced by two of her cousins who were both very open about being lesbian - but at that point, she thought she was ugly and would and feel much better as a man. desperately so.
i haven't managed to express the story in the manner i wished... and there was a morale to the story; along the lines of 'children aren't always set in their ways and change their minds'...
NB i may edit this when i re-read it again because the expression is flawed...
in reply to daniel1234
i agree - i really hope this thread stays open too. this means people have to maintain a civil and accepting facade when it comes to other peoples opinions. If you have to disagree please do it nicely.