[identity profile] deamondamien.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] multiplicity_archives
Well, hey

I, personally am fairly new to LJ. A buddy of mine kept saying I should post here since I'm new and all and, well part of a multiple system, if that's what you want to call it. I try to avoid the terminology, it's all so confining and I hate confining things. I'm a guy (a happily straight guy, at that) in a female body. well, the 'body' is female, I was born into this body male. some would call me trans, and I'm ok with that I guess, cause' I don't mind being in a female body somuch as some would think. I'm a guy, happy to be a guy, I just own the wrong parts. Oh well. I don't have any interest in transitioning to male or anything, and the rest of the people in this body probably wouldn't be happy about it anyway. cept' maybe the other guys. I don't identify with lesbian... I'm a guy. I can't help that this body isn't.

anyway, guess I'm just around looking for friends and stuff. maybe other guys in girl bodies who might get where I'm coming from. just people to talk to and stuff. being new to LJ is kinda lonely I've noticed

so, uh, hi?

oh and I've said it before, and I'll say it again. I love boxers. they're comfy.

~ Damien

Date: 2005-11-17 06:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jadedmosaic.livejournal.com
Hi Damien,
Im Elaine, nice to meet ya, Im female and 17 but we have a guy here and we steal his boxers all the time and his shirts.One gut is awayfor now, Good to meet you. Personally I lovethe guys being here,there never bitchy just they brood sometimes
Thnx Elaine

Date: 2005-11-17 06:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jadedmosaic.livejournal.com
Oh this is off topic I apologize, but I dont want to start a new page. I'm trying to have my night cigarette but the lighter is empty I found the butane thingy but dont know how to fill the lighter. All adults are having a private discussion about me. Does anyone know is it the hole on the bottom or the top where the flame comes out?

Thnx. I dont want to walk by them or interruppt and get in more dog doo! Damien do ya smoke? I just smoke at night online. I get yelled at for making the computer yellow."If its not one thing its another" Rosanna Rosanna Danna

Date: 2005-11-17 04:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ksol1460.livejournal.com
Use wooden matches like ^Imoreh does and you won't have that problem. He also smokes his one or two cloves outside, which may solve the conflict with your fellow computer users.

Date: 2005-11-18 12:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jadedmosaic.livejournal.com
Thanks Jay,
Elaine is in dog doo. We cannot believe she asked How do you fill a lighter? Cause she could not wait. LOL

Actually we took the ciggaretes away from her.

She is always spouting off about natural medecine so we sat her down and told her there is NO natural medecine for Lung Cancer. We through out her and Jades ciggs and Toni's special ciggs from Montreal theres bound to be some cranky people here> I'm ducking under covers when there around Peace Shelby and Marcil and Tiea

Date: 2005-11-18 09:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ksol1460.livejournal.com
Tell her to smoke herbals instead. Honeyrose Deluxe.

Normalcy is relative.

Date: 2005-11-19 12:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sethrenn.livejournal.com
""Until the Industrial Revolution, crying in public was pretty normal,
even for men," says Tom Lutz, Ph.D., an associate professor of English
at the University of Iowa and author of Crying: The Natural and
Cultural History of Tears. "Heroic epics from Greek times through the
Middle Ages are soggy with weeping of all sorts," Dr. Lutz says.
"Through most of history, tearlessness has not been the standard of
manliness."

For instance, when Roland, the most famous warrior of medieval France
died, 20,000 other knights wept so profusely they fainted and fell
from their horses. Long before that, the Greek warrior Odysseus cries
in almost every chapter of Homer's Iliad while St. Francis of Assisi
was said to have been blinded by weeping. Later, in the 16th century,
sobbing openly at a play, opera or symphony was considered
appropriately sensitive for men and women alike." -- Charles Downey (http://healthgate.partners.org/browsing/browseContent.asp?fileName=14240.xml&title=Toxic%20tears:%20how%20crying%20keeps%20you%20healthy)

Re: Normalcy is relative.

Date: 2005-11-22 05:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sethrenn.livejournal.com
*laughs* That is the closest we've found to someone really looking like Ruka, apart from a few Chinese soap opera stars who don't wear the right clothes or the glasses.

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